Donald Trump hasn’t changed much since taking office, but the structure surrounding the president has evolved more than once. The latest iteration of conditions in the White House appears designed to allow Trump to feel less constrained than he’s been.
The New Yorker‘s Susan Glasser recently published a report on the Republican’s habit of getting in his own way.
This is likely to happen even more in the coming months, because of another one of the key events of the past year: Trump’s firing of his top officials, including Tillerson, the White House chief of staff John Kelly, and the national-security adviser H. R. McMaster, and replacing them with hard-liners more willing to accept Trump’s positions.
All those moves, as the foreign-policy analyst Thomas Wright put it to me, are “part of a deliberate strategy to maximize his freedom to operate.” And that was before the news of Mattis’s departure hit.
Around the same time, the New York Times reported that the president “appears determined to assemble a new team of advisers who will not tell him what he cannot do.” It came on the heels of a report from Politico that said acting White House Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney, having seen John Kelly fail to instill a sense of discipline in the president, “intends to give Trump more leeway to act as he chooses.”
A Washington Post report added, “For President Trump, the era of containment is over.”









