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kaggle-ho-019891House Oversight

Internal campaign chatter hints at Trump’s confidence and Bannon’s dissent before 2016 election

Internal campaign chatter hints at Trump’s confidence and Bannon’s dissent before 2016 election The passage provides anecdotal recollections of campaign insiders without specific names, dates, transactions, or actionable evidence. It mentions known figures (Trump, Bannon, Kushner, Comey) but offers no new factual leads, only generic opinions and speculative statements, limiting investigative utility. Key insights: Steve Bannon reportedly doubted favorable poll numbers despite campaign optimism.; Jared Kushner is described as the effective head of the campaign.; Trump allegedly told Roger Ailes he would benefit from a post‑election media network.

Date
Unknown
Source
House Oversight
Reference
kaggle-ho-019891
Pages
1
Persons
21
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

Internal campaign chatter hints at Trump’s confidence and Bannon’s dissent before 2016 election The passage provides anecdotal recollections of campaign insiders without specific names, dates, transactions, or actionable evidence. It mentions known figures (Trump, Bannon, Kushner, Comey) but offers no new factual leads, only generic opinions and speculative statements, limiting investigative utility. Key insights: Steve Bannon reportedly doubted favorable poll numbers despite campaign optimism.; Jared Kushner is described as the effective head of the campaign.; Trump allegedly told Roger Ailes he would benefit from a post‑election media network.

Persons Referenced (21)

Charles Edward Small

a national campaign, and who, before Trump, ran a small-time, down-ballot polling firm, understood full w

Jared Kushner

ther Conway nor Trump himself nor his son-in- law Jared Kushner—the effective head of the campaign, or the design

Donald Trump

The unspoken agreement among them: not only would Donald Trump not be president, he should probably not be. Conv

Eric Trump

involved in a national campaign, and who, before Trump, ran a small-time, down-ballot polling firm, unde

NER Regional Director

ad the gall to pressure him to quit the race. FBI director James Comey, having bizarrely hung Hillary out to

Blaine Trump

involved in a national campaign, and who, before Trump, ran a small-time, down-ballot polling firm, unde

James Comey

ll to pressure him to quit the race. FBI director James Comey, having bizarrely hung Hillary out to dry by sayi

Maurene Comey

pressure him to quit the race. FBI director James Comey, having bizarrely hung Hillary out to dry by sayi

Melania Trump

involved in a national campaign, and who, before Trump, ran a small-time, down-ballot polling firm, unde

George H.W. Bush

anguine. He had survived the release of the Billy Bush tape when, in the uproar that followed, the RNC h

Bill Clinton

ays before the election, had helped avert a total Clinton landslide. “IT can be the most famous man in the

Pierre James

ll to pressure him to quit the race. FBI director James Comey, having bizarrely hung Hillary out to dry b

Robert Trump

involved in a national campaign, and who, before Trump, ran a small-time, down-ballot polling firm, unde

Joshua Kushner

onway nor Trump himself nor his son-in- law Jared Kushner—the effective head of the campaign, or the design

Chelsea Clinton

ays before the election, had helped avert a total Clinton landslide. “IT can be the most famous man in the

Ivanka Trump

involved in a national campaign, and who, before Trump, ran a small-time, down-ballot polling firm, unde

Kellyanne Conway

ead stare—had actually done extraordinarily well. Conway, who had never been involved in a national campai

Mary Small

a national campaign, and who, before Trump, ran a small-time, down-ballot polling firm, understood full w

Steve Bannon

ir unexpected adventure would soon be over. Only Steve Bannon, in his odd-man view, insisted the numbers would

Ivana Trump

involved in a national campaign, and who, before Trump, ran a small-time, down-ballot polling firm, unde

Hillary Clinton

ays before the election, had helped avert a total Clinton landslide. “IT can be the most famous man in the

Tags

kagglehouse-oversight2016-electioncampaign-strategymedia-speculationpolitical-insiders

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
dead stare—had actually done extraordinarily well. Conway, who had never been involved in a national campaign, and who, before Trump, ran a small-time, down-ballot polling firm, understood full well that, post-campaign, she would now be one of the leading conservative voices on cable news. In fact, one of the Trump campaign pollsters, John McLaughlin, had begun to suggest within the past week or so that some key state numbers, heretofore dismal, might actually be changing to Trump’s advantage. But neither Conway nor Trump himself nor his son-in- law Jared Kushner—the effective head of the campaign, or the designated family monitor of 1it—wavered in their certainty: their unexpected adventure would soon be over. Only Steve Bannon, in his odd-man view, insisted the numbers would break in their favor. But this being Bannon’s view—crazy Steve—it was quite the opposite of being a reassuring one. Almost everybody in the campaign, still an extremely small outfit, thought of themselves as a clear-eyed team, as realistic about their prospects as perhaps any in politics. The unspoken agreement among them: not only would Donald Trump not be president, he should probably not be. Conveniently, the former conviction meant nobody had to deal with the latter issue. As the campaign came to an end, Trump himself was sanguine. He had survived the release of the Billy Bush tape when, in the uproar that followed, the RNC had had the gall to pressure him to quit the race. FBI director James Comey, having bizarrely hung Hillary out to dry by saying he was reopening the investigation into her emails eleven days before the election, had helped avert a total Clinton landslide. “IT can be the most famous man in the world,” Trump told his on-again, off-again aide Sam Nunberg at the outset of the campaign. “But do you want to be president?” Nunberg asked (a qualitatively different question than the usual existential candidate test: “Why do you want to be president?”). Nunberg did not get an answer. The point was, there didn’t need to be an answer because he wasn’t going to be president. Trump’s longtime friend Roger Ailes liked to say that if you wanted a career in television, first run for president. Now Trump, encouraged by Ailes, was floating rumors about a Trump network. It was a great future. He would come out of this campaign, Trump assured Ailes, with a far more powerful brand and untold opportunities. “This is bigger than I ever dreamed of,” he told Ailes in a conversation a week before the election. “I don’t think about losing because it isn’t losing. We’ve totally won.” What’s more, he was already laying down his public response to losing the election: /t was stolen!

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HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016696

Royal-Southern PCN OWNERNAME1 OWNERNAME2 STREETNAME BLK SITEADDR PADDR1 PADDR2 PADDR3 TOTTAXVAL ACRES PROPUSE CAMA-RESBLD.YEAR BUILT CAMA-RESBLD.EFFECTIVE YEAR NUMBER OF BEDROOMS NUMBER OF FULL BATHROOMS NUMBER OF HALF BATHROOMS STORY HEIGHT CAMA-RESBLD.BUILDING VALUE CAMA-RESBLD.BUILDING AREA TOTAL AREA SQUARE FOOT LIVING AREA CAMA-COMBLD.YEAR BUILT CAMA-COMBLD.EFFECTIVE YEAR NUMBER OF UNITS STORIES CONSTRUCTION TYPE CONSTRUCTION TYPE DESC CAMA-COMBLD.BUILDING VALUE CAMA-COMBLD.BUILDING AREA C

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HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016552

Royal-Southern PCN OWNERNAME1 OWNERNAME2 STREETNAME BLK SITEADDR PADDR1 PADDR2 PADDR3 TOTTAXVAL ACRES PROPUSE CAMA-RESBLD.YEAR BUILT CAMA-RESBLD.EFFECTIVE YEAR NUMBER OF BEDROOMS NUMBER OF FULL BATHROOMS NUMBER OF HALF BATHROOMS STORY HEIGHT CAMA-RESBLD.BUILDING VALUE CAMA-RESBLD.BUILDING AREA TOTAL AREA SQUARE FOOT LIVING AREA CAMA-COMBLD.YEAR BUILT CAMA-COMBLD.EFFECTIVE YEAR NUMBER OF UNITS STORIES CONSTRUCTION TYPE CONSTRUCTION TYPE DESC CAMA-COMBLD.BUILDING VALUE CAMA-COMBLD.BUILDING AREA C

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