Predictably, the campaign's loss of elevation has all manner of Trump courtiers and advisors blaming each other for the past week's various ****ups and distractions—including at least one
major unforced error by the principal, himself. "It's just two weeks, and I'm like, what the hell is going on," one stunned Mar-a-Lago denizen told me.
In many ways, their frustration is understandable. For months now, Trump's campaign has been lauded for its eerie proficiency under the co-management of political professionals
Susie Wiles and
Chris LaCivita. And yet, in recent days, Wiles has faced an unusual degree of criticism in Trumpworld, after she quickly jumped on the Vance train and was charged with vetting him. LaCivita, for his part, is getting lashed for publicly gloating about Trump's ostensible path to 320 electoral college votes. Some detractors blame both Wiles and LaCivita for not having a backup plan for Harris (a source familiar countered that they were "exceptionally ready"); others are frustrated over the statement Wiles and LaCivita issued celebrating the resignation of
Paul Dans, the director of Project 2025, after Democrats made it politically toxic. "They danced on the grave after Dans resigned," said one Washington insider. "It was a 'Let this be a warning to anyone who claims to have the president's ear,' but with a knife."
Naturally, there's an emerging consensus that this insider squabbling, reminiscent of an earlier chaotic era, is distracting from the race. In one pointed example, twenty sources took the time to blame
Kellyanne Conway for leaking negative stories about J.D. Vance to The Bulwark's
Marc Caputo. "A lot of people are very frustrated. There are cracks within the ranks and team, why are the consultants knifing Kellyanne in the Bulwark?" said another Trump ally. "They should be focusing on Kamala."