“I didn’t really get it at first, but because it sounded good, I stuck to it,” he wrote of this counsel. “Advice from my mother, Mary MacLeod Trump: Trust in God and be true to yourself,” he tweeted on February 5, 2013, and also on July 30, 2013, October 24, 2013, and October 25, 2013, and also on March 21, 2014, and January 28, 2015, the same thing every time, a cut-and-paste aphorism ready for periodic posting-which itself was recycled from a page in his 2004 book, How to Get Rich. On Twitter, he has called her “ a wonderful person,” “ a great beauty” and not much more. In interviews over the past several decades, the president has called her “ fantastic” and “ tremendous” and “ very warm”-“ a homemaker” who “loved it.” In 2005, on Martha Stewart’s television show, Trump briefly mentioned his mother’s meatloaf. But Trump’s relationship with his mother, while less explored, is just as consequential. Who, then, was Mary Trump? The 45th president of the United States would seem to be the product of one domineering parent. Trump might not agree, but most psychologists agree: Your mother helps make you who you are. But to discount her role in the creation of the Trump persona is to disregard decades of study about family dynamics. Trump’s mother, who died in 2000, had in some ways been fading from view for many years before her son on Inauguration Day placed his hand on the Bible he got from her. “For all the ups and downs of our lives,” Obama once told an interviewer about his mother, “there was never a moment where I didn’t feel as if I was special.” Dunham died at 52, more than a decade before her son was sworn in as the 44th president, but in books by Obama and his biographers, she has been cast as an almost elemental force. And their sons celebrated by them throughout their political careers. From Barbara Bush, the powerful matriarch of the two-time first family to Virginia Kelley, who all but singlehandedly launched Bill Clinton from the Arkansas boondocks to Washington and the West Wing to Ann Dunham, the anthropologist who steered Barack Obama from Hawaii to Indonesia to the Ivy League and the White House-the sway these women had over their sons was incontrovertible. The mothers of presidents often have been a kind of super-influencer. Judging by the biographical material, created largely by an aggressively unreliable narrator and those in his employ, the 45th president of the United States would seem to be the product of one domineering parent. She was, we have been told, an acquiescent housewife, a spouse who didn’t hassle her dour, driven husband, a mother who relished pomp and planted the seeds of her second son’s acumen for showmanship and promotion. Mary Trump, by contrast, has been more of a ghost in his voluminous public record, a cardboard cutout of a character. “That’s why I’m so screwed up, because I had a father that pushed me pretty hard,” he wrote in his 2007 book, Think Big. This scenario, as uneven as it may seem, was a continuation of the setup in Trump’s office on the 26th floor of Trump Tower, where a photo of his father always was proudly, prominently situated on his desk-and a photo of his mother, in the words of a former staffer, was “noticeably absent.” It can be risky to read too much into the placement of family pictures-except with Trump, it confirms a disparity that has been evident for decades: the looming, constant presence of his father, and the afterthought status of his mother.įor so long, Donald Trump has talked often about the profound influence of Fred Trump. When, exactly, and why, Hicks couldn’t or wouldn’t say. Sometime in the spring, White House communications director Hope Hicks told me recently, the president added one of his mother, Mary Trump. When Donald Trump moved into the Oval Office in January, he placed on the table behind the Resolute Desk a single family photo-of Fred Trump, his father. Michael Kruse is a senior staff writer at Politico Magazine.
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