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d-20864House OversightOther

Bannon claims leadership of nationalist-populist movement after Trump backs McConnell-backed Senate candidate

The passage provides anecdotal commentary on internal political dynamics between Steve Bannon, Donald Trump, and Mitch McConnell, but lacks concrete details such as transactions, dates beyond a vague Bannon describes himself as leader of the national‑populist movement. Trump supported Mitch McConnell’s Senate candidate Luther Strange over Roy Moore in Alabama. Bannon references personal health ch

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #020112
Pages
1
Persons
2
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage provides anecdotal commentary on internal political dynamics between Steve Bannon, Donald Trump, and Mitch McConnell, but lacks concrete details such as transactions, dates beyond a vague Bannon describes himself as leader of the national‑populist movement. Trump supported Mitch McConnell’s Senate candidate Luther Strange over Roy Moore in Alabama. Bannon references personal health ch

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steve-bannonpolitical-influencepoliticsalabama-senate-racemitch-mcconnelltrump-administrationhouse-oversight

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EPILOGUE: BANNON AND TRUMP n a sweltering morning in October 2017, the man who had more or less single- handedly brought about the U.S. withdrawal from the Paris climate accord, stood on the steps of the Breitbart town house and said, with a hearty laugh, “I guess global warming is real.” Steve Bannon had lost twenty pounds since his exit from the White House six weeks before—he was on a crash all-sushi diet. “That building,” said his friend David Bossie, speaking about all White Houses but especially the Trump White House, “takes perfectly healthy people and turns them into old, unhealthy people.” But Bannon, who Bossie had declared on virtual life support during his final days in the West Wing, was again, by his own description, “on fire.” He had moved out of the Arlington “safe house” and reestablished himself back at the Breitbart Embassy, turning it into a headquarters for the next stage of the Trump movement, which might not include Trump at all. Asked about Trump’s leadership of the nationalist-populist movement, Bannon registered a not inconsiderable change in the country’s political landscape: “I am the leader of the national-populist movement.” One cause of Bannon’s boast and new resolve was that Trump, for no reason that Bannon could quite divine, had embraced Mitch McConnell’s establishment candidate in the recent Republican run-off in Alabama rather than support the nat-pop choice for the Senate seat vacated by now attorney general Jeff Sessions. After all, McConnell and the president were barely on speaking terms. From his August “working holiday” in Bedminster, the president’s staff had tried to organize a makeup meeting with McConnell, but McConnell’s staff had sent back word that it wouldn’t be possible because the Senate leader would be getting a haircut. But the president—ever hurt and confused by his inability to get along with the congressional leadership, and then, conversely, enraged by their refusal to get along with him—had gone all-in for the McConnell-backed Luther Strange, who had run against Bannon’s candidate, the right-wing firebrand Roy Moore. (Even by Alabama standards, Moore was far right: he had been removed as chief justice of the Alabama Supreme Court

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iMessage thread hints at paid media production, high‑level political figures, and covert coordination with foreign interests The conversation contains multiple actionable clues – a $100k invoice, references to a ‘cast’ for filming, mentions of Prince Andrew, Donald Trump, Steve Bannon, Michael Wolff, and Chinese market manipulation – that suggest a coordinated media or influence operation involving powerful political actors and foreign financial interests. While the specifics are vague, the repeated references to payments, legal arrangements, and government sensitivity provide concrete follow‑up leads (e.g., trace the $100k invoice, identify the production crew, locate the ‘letter to Burke’, and verify the alleged Chinese market influence). The content is moderately controversial and ties to high‑profile individuals, warranting further investigation. Key insights: Reference to sending an invoice for $100k to Darren – potential payment for services.; Discussion of assembling a ‘cast’ and filming on an island, with government interest in controlling press.; Mentions of Prince Andrew, Donald Trump, and Bannon in a context suggesting exploitation or coordinated messaging.

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