In a Wall Street Journal interview published Sunday, Trump hit back at Ann Coulter, a conservative author whose threats about the defection of the president’s base were credited with pushing him to his once-uncompromising stance. When he backed down on Friday, she called him a “wimp."

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“I hear she’s become very hostile,” Trump told the Journal. “Maybe I didn’t return her phone call or something.”

Also on Sunday, he attacked two top reporters for Fox News Channel , his news channel of choice, saying on Twitter that they had displayed “even less understanding of the Wall negotiations than the folks at FAKE NEWS CNN & NBC!”

Together, the swipes represent one more piece of evidence that the dawn of divided government has put Trump in a dangerous and defensive political position, compounded by the indictment Friday of his longtime associate Roger Stone. They show just how much he depends on positive punditry and other forms of approval. And they telegraph his sensitivity to criticism, particularly from people he has identified as friends, loyal to his often-dubious claims.

Still, the president has struck a defiant tone, maintaining that the deal — which reflected Democratic objectives — “was in no way a concession” and vowing repeatedly to build the wall. “21 days goes very quickly," he wrote on Saturday, referring to the three-week period in which the federal government will remain open amid negotiations about a wall. He concluded, "We will build the Wall!”

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His posture appeared to recoup his standing with certain powerful right-wing platforms. The Daily Caller, which at first had run the ominous headline, “TRUMP CAVES,” by Sunday was promoting the president’s criticism of Fox News. So was Mike Cernovich, a far-right social media personality who had derided the president as the “Commander-in-Soy” and called Pelosi “alpha.” The Drudge Report had replaced its dire warning, “NO WALL FUNDS,” with a piece by Michael Goodwin, a New York Post columnist and Fox News contributor, judging, “President Trump is down, but not out.”

Others remained by his side through the fallout. “Anyone out there thinking President Trump caved today, you don’t know the Donald Trump I know,” Fox News host Sean Hannity told his viewers on Friday night.

But in refusing to make excuses for the president, Coulter has cast herself as the truest prophet of his agenda. She has used her following with his base — rooted in her early support of his candidacy, as well as her defense of the causes that helped power his rise — to try to hold him to his campaign promises.

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“There’s nothing Trump can do that won’t be forgiven," she wrote in her 2016 book “In Trump We Trust: E Pluribus Awesome!” She added forebodingly: "Except change his immigration policies.”

Coulter has referred to Trump as her “emperor god.” Now she calls herself a “former Trumper.” Her frustration with the president has simmered over the past two years, at one point driving her to ask, “who DOESN’T want Trump impeached?" It boiled over on Friday.

Speaking with HBO host Bill Maher, she claimed to be channeling a rebellion in Trump’s base over his inability to build a border wall. His failure to get Mexico to pay for the structure is scarcely mentioned anymore.

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“The base is what has rebelled here," she said. “And they can take me as a stand-in for the base, but that’s all I am — a member of the base.”

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When pressed about her about-face — asked what her “first clue” was that Trump was “a lying con man,” as Maher put it — Coulter quipped: "Okay, I’m a very stupid girl, fine.”

Trump, who shares Coulter’s penchant for online provocation, responded to her harsh assessment of his record by mocking her as a needy for his attention, incensed that he hadn’t called her back.

The rejoinder speaks to the direct line that certain right-wing media figures enjoy with the president. According to New York Magazine, Hannity talks with Trump on the phone most weeknights.

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His comeback against Coulter is also of a piece with his frequent dismissal of female critics as desperate. In December 2017, after Trump accused Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), who vying to challenge him for president, of “begging” him for campaign contributions, saying she “would do anything for them,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), also a presidential contender, blasted the president for “trying to bully, intimidate and slut-shame” her colleague. Earlier the same year, Trump lashed out at the hosts of MSNBC’s “Morning Joe,” writing that Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski had “insisted” on joining him for New Year’s Eve at Mar-a-Lago, his club in Palm Beach, Fla., and that Brzezinski had been “bleeding badly from a facelift.”

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The president didn’t employ such caustic language in his complaint about Fox News, lobbed on Twitter on Sunday evening.

He didn’t make clear how exactly John Roberts, the network’s chief White House correspondent, and Gillian Turner, a Washington correspondent, had disappointed him, like errant children in Shakespeare’s “King Lear.” But the two had appeared earlier Sunday for a panel on Fox News, in which they bluntly assessed the costs of the shutdown, not just for the president’s political standing but for the national defense.

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“One of the losers I wanted to mention that people are not spending enough time on this week is U.S. cybersecurity defenses," Turner said. One federal source had told her, she said, that the government was more vulnerable to cyber penetration and online terrorism in the week before the shutdown ended "than at any point in history.”

Roberts agreed, recalling, “I think a mutual friend of ours was saying if you were going to attack the United States, if you were a terrorist during the shutdown, now would be the time.”

Turner nodded. “Now’s a great time,” she said.