The hostilities between Donald Trump and Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) have been ongoing for quite a while, but it’s probably fair to say the tensions reached a new level this morning.
The Tennessee Republican appeared on NBC’s “Today” earlier, and expressed concern about the president needlessly pushing the United States closer to war. True to form, Trump responded with another Twitter salvo, publishing five odd tweets in which the president described the senator as “liddle’ Bob Corker” — his use of apostrophes remains something of a mystery — and said the Republican lawmaker retired “in Tennesse [sic] when I refused to endorse him.”
Corker initially responded with a tweet of his own, lamenting “untruths from an utterly untruthful president,” before going considerably further during an interview with CNN in a Senate hallway.
“When his term is over, I think the debasing of our nation, the constant non-truth telling, and the — just the name calling, the things that I think, the debasement of our nation is what we will be remembered most important, and that’s regretful. […]
“I don’t know why he lowers himself to such a low, low standard, and debases our country in a way that he does, but he does.”
After noting that the president “has great difficulty with the truth,” Corker went on to say “world leaders are very aware that much of what [Trump] says is untrue.” He added, in reference to Trump, “I think that he’s proven himself unable to rise to the occasion … I don’t think that that’s possible. He’s obviously not going to rise to the occasion as president.”
Asked if he regrets supporting Trump’s candidacy in 2016, Corker demurred, but said he certainly wouldn’t back the president’s re-election campaign.
It’s not unprecedented for a president to quarrel with lawmakers from his own party, but it’s hard to think of a modern parallel for Corker arguing publicly that Trump “debases our country” with his dishonesty.
As Rachel noted on the show a couple of weeks ago, Corker “really is the head of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and he is going out of his way to say … he believes the president is unfit for office.” And that, in and of itself, is rather extraordinary.









