Trump leans on ‘fake news’ line to combat reports of West Wing dysfunction The president appears especially irked by the growing narrative of Bannon as the real power in the White House.

President Donald Trump on Monday lashed out via Twitter at a series of news reports revealing the turmoil inside the White House, leaning on his crutch of “fake news” as he struggles to control a hardening narrative about a dysfunctional West Wing.

One of his missives came from Air Force One en route to Tampa, Florida, as Trump panned a New York Times report that detailed the friction inside his administration and its early stumbles.


"The failing @nytimes writes total fiction concerning me. They have gotten it wrong for two years, and now are making up stories & sources!" Trump tweeted at 11:32 a.m., ignoring the fact that many of his top advisers were quoted by name in the story.

White House press secretary Sean Spicer voiced Trump’s indignation during a gaggle with reporters on the return flight to Washington, D.C. Spicer, who was quoted in the report, pilloried the Times’ “so-called reporting” as “literally the epitome of fake news.”

He attacked what he called an “unacceptable” report that he argued contained “blatant factual errors” and warranted an apology to the president.

Trump “from day one, back through the campaign and frankly his time as a successful businessman, always called the shots. He’s the decider,” Spicer told reporters. “He’s the one who develops the policy, he’s the one who makes the decision, and I think there are so many times when you see things that don’t recognize that he is the guy that calls the shots. He develops the policies, he implements the policies, he makes the key decisions.”

Trump himself had seemed particularly incensed by reports and parodies about chief strategist Steve Bannon being the actual decision-maker in the White House.

“I call my own shots, largely based on an accumulation of data, and everyone knows it. Some FAKE NEWS media, in order to marginalize, lies!” Trump tweeted.

His tweet came at 7:01 a.m., 52 minutes after Joe Scarborough, whose MSNBC morning show the president is known to watch religiously, suggested that “maybe Bannon’s calling all the shots.”

Scarborough’s comments — and Trump’s frustrations — are the outgrowth of a media narrative that has mushroomed over the past several days, initially with Bannon’s face gracing last week’s Time magazine cover, which declared him “The Great Manipulator,” and then in stinging satire, on “Saturday Night Live,” that presented Bannon as the real owner of the Resolute Desk.

The sketch comedy franchise opened with Alec Baldwin portraying the president in the Oval Office, where he was joined by Bannon, dressed as the grim reaper while indulging Trump’s worst impulses by encouraging his bellicosity during calls to foreign leaders.

The skit parodied reports of Trump’s poor statesmanship during the calls and brought to life The New York Times’ editorial board’s opinion last week — headlined “President Bannon?” — suggesting that the former Breitbart executive “is positioning himself … as the de facto president.”

In the story that drew Trump's ire Monday, the Times also reported that Bannon is “the president’s dominant adviser, despite Mr. Trump’s anger that he was not fully briefed on details of the executive order he signed giving his chief strategist a seat on the National Security Council.”

Two weeks after an adviser memorably characterized falsehoods coming from the White House as “alternative facts,” Trump is increasingly turning to his “fake news” line to try to puncture swelling story lines that are unflattering to his nascent presidency and counter the unfounded claims from the White House. That’s despite the fact that not too long ago, Trump’s critics were the ones pushing the “fake news” term to describe false reports that proliferated on the internet during the presidential campaign to boost Trump’s candidacy.

Trump further hammered the media Monday afternoon, telling service members at MacDill Air Force Base that the media is taking a pass on reporting terrorist attacks.

“Radical Islamic terrorists are determined to strike our homeland as they did on 9/11, as they did from Boston to Orlando to San Bernardino, and all across Europe. You have seen what happened in Paris and Nice. All over Europe, it’s happening,” Trump said. “It’s gotten to a point where it’s not even being reported. And in many cases the very, very dishonest press doesn’t want to report it. They have their reasons, and you understand that.”

Spicer tried to back up Trump while briefing reporters on Monday afternoon, suggesting that the media is more foccused on protests against Trump than terror attacks.

“Protests get blown out of the water and yet an attack or a foiled attack doesn’t necessarily get the same coverage,” he said. “He’s doing what he can to protect this nation.”

Spicer also said there are “a lot of instances” of terrorist attacks that the news media hasn’t given proper coverage to, but he did not name any specific attacks that were unreported, and said the White House will “provide a list later."

Kellyanne Conway, Trump’s White House counselor, is caught up in her own “fake news” controversy after she cited last week a made-up terrorist attack in Bowling Green, Kentucky, to justify the administration’s highly controversial travel and refugee ban.

Although she later called it an honest mistake and blasted other “fake” stories, Cosmopolitan magazine reported on Monday that Conway cited the same “massacre” in an interview with one of its reporters on Jan. 29.

Conway also sparred with CNN after reports emerged that the White House had offered to have her appear on its Sunday morning show — “State of the Union” — and that CNN said no.

“False. I could do no live Sunday shows this week BC of family. Plus, I was invited onto CNN today & tomorrow. CNN Brass on those emails,” Conway tweeted.

CNN’s communications team pushed back on Twitter against Conway’s explanation. “@KellyannePolls was offered to SOTU on Sunday by the White House. We passed. Those are the facts,” the message read.

Even right-leaning Fox News is questioning some of the baseless claims coming from Trump and his team. In an interview that aired as part of Sunday’s Super Bowl pregame show, Bill O’Reilly twice pressed Trump to back up his unfounded assertion about millions of illegal votes during last year’s election.

“You say things you can’t back up factually, and as the president, if you say, for example, that there are 3 million illegal aliens who voted and then you don’t have the data to back it up, some people are gonna say that it’s irresponsible for a president to say that,” O’Reilly said to Trump. “Is there any validity to that?”

"Many people have come out and said I’m right. You know that," the president responded.

"I know, but you’ve gotta have data to back that up," O'Reilly shot back.

Moments later, as the president repeated his unfounded claim, O'Reilly pressed again for more corroboration.

"A lot of people have come out and said that I am correct," Trump said.

"But the data has to show that 3 million illegals voted," O'Reilly countered.

"Forget that," Trump said. "Forget all of that."

And Trump’s obsession with the poll numbers also reared its head on Monday. Trump’s explanation for the shaky support of his presidency and his policies? Fake news.

“Any negative polls are fake news, just like the CNN, ABC, NBC polls in the election. Sorry, people want border security and extreme vetting,” he tweeted.

Madeline Conway and Matthew Nussbaum contributed to this report.

