By
Karen Tumulty and Juliet Eilperin
January
26, 2017
On the morning after Donald Trump’s
inauguration, acting National Park Service director Michael T. Reynolds
received an extraordinary summons: The new president wanted to talk to him.
In a Saturday phone call, Trump personally
ordered Reynolds to produce additional photographs of the previous day’s crowds
on the Mall, according to three individuals who have knowledge of the
conversation. The president believed that the photos might prove that the media
had lied in reporting that attendance had been no better than average.
Trump also expressed anger over a retweet sent
from the agency’s account, in which side-by-side photographs showed far fewer
people at his swearing-in than had shown up to see Barack Obama’s inauguration
in 2009.
According to one account, Reynolds had been
contacted by the White House and given a phone number to call. When he dialed
it, he was told to hold for the president.
For Trump, who sees himself and his
achievements in superlative terms, the inauguration’s crowd size has been a
source of grievance that he appears unable to put behind him. It is a measure
of his fixation on the issue that he would devote part of his first morning in
office to it — and that he would take out his frustrations on an acting Park
Service director.
Word rapidly spread through the agency and
Washington. The individuals who informed The Washington Post about the call did
so on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the
conversation.
Neither Reynolds nor the Park Service would
talk about it.
“The National Park Service does not comment on
internal conversations among administration officials,” agency spokesman Thomas
Crosson said.
White House deputy press secretary Sarah
Huckabee Sanders said the call simply demonstrated that Trump’s management
style is to be “so accessible, and constantly in touch.”
“He’s not somebody who sits around and waits.
He takes action and gets things done,” Sanders said. “That’s one of the reasons
that he is president today, and Hillary Clinton isn’t.”
On Saturday, the same day Trump spoke with
Reynolds, the new president used an appearance at CIA headquarters to deliver a
blistering attack on the media for reporting that large swaths of the Mall were
nearly empty during the event.
“It’s a lie,” Trump said. “We caught [the
media]. We caught them in a beauty.”
“It looked like a million, a million and a half
people,” Trump said, vastly inflating what the available evidence suggested.
Later that day, White House press secretary
Sean Spicer reiterated Trump’s complaints about media coverage of the crowd in
a tongue-lashing from the lectern of the briefing room.
“These attempts to lessen the enthusiasm of the
inauguration are shameful and wrong,” Spicer said.
The Park Service does not release crowd
estimates. Experts, however, have estimated that the 2017 turnout was no more
than a third the size of Obama’s eight years earlier.
Reynolds was taken aback by Trump’s request,
but he did secure some additional aerial photographs and forwarded them to the
White House through normal channels in the Interior Department, the people who
notified The Post said. The photos, however, did not prove Trump’s contention
that the crowd size was upward of 1 million.
Reynolds, who had served as the Park Service’s
deputy director of operations for six months before assuming the post of acting
director, is a third-generation employee who has worked there for more than
30 years. As deputy director, he oversaw the Park Service’s
$2.8 billion budget and more than 22,000 employees.
In the days since Trump’s election, the Park
Service has become an unlikely protagonist in a battle between the new
president and some career government employees.
The trouble began late Friday, when the
agency’s official Twitter account retweeted two messages that could be
perceived as critical of the new administration: the one comparing the relative
crowd size for Trump’s inauguration to that of Obama’s 2009 swearing-in, and
another that noted policy pages that had been removed from the White House’s
website.
That prompted an “urgent directive” to Interior
employees that they “shut down Twitter platforms immediately until further
notice,” which was lifted early Saturday morning. Crosson then apologized on
Twitter for “mistaken RTs from our account.”
On Tuesday, the Badlands National Park’s
Twitter account became a
social-media sensation when it
posted four tweets in a row about rising atmospheric carbon dioxide
concentrations and the threats posed by climate change.
Those tweets were then deleted. An NPS official
later explained that Badlands NPS officials learned they were posted by a
former employee who still had access to the account, and decided to remove
them.
Spicer told reporters this week that White
House officials had not dictated any agency to impose new restrictions on
public communications and that some federal officials, such as those at the
Park Service, were not in compliance with their own department’s policies.
Trump, meanwhile, has continued to press the
argument that the media has given a misleading account of the crowds that
attended his inauguration.
“I had a massive amount of people here,” the
president told ABC News anchor David Muir in an interview Wednesday. “They were
showing pictures that were very unflattering, as unflattering — from certain
angles — that were taken early and lots of other things.”
As he guided Muir through the West Wing, Trump
paused at a photo on the wall, taken from behind him as he delivered his
inaugural address: “Here’s a picture of the event. Here’s a picture of the
crowd. Now, the audience was the biggest ever, but this crowd was massive. Look
how far back it goes. This crowd was massive.”
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