Wicked Game: An Insider's Story on How Trump Won, Mueller Failed, and America Lost
By Rick Gates
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About this ebook
In a factual firsthand account of this turbulent period in our nation’s history, Donald Trump’s 2016 deputy campaign chairman takes us deep behind the scenes to examine the truth about how Trump won, why the Mueller investigation failed, and how the current state of presidential politics is tearing apart the very fabric of our democracy.
Rick Gates, who served as Donald Trump’s deputy campaign chairman in 2016 and as a cooperating witness in the Mueller investigation, gives readers a rare, in-depth look at one of the most controversial elections—and presidents—in U.S. history.
From a perspective only he can offer, Rick answers the important questions: How was Trump able to beat sixteen high-profile, experienced Republican contenders, and Hillary Clinton, to win in 2016? How did the campaign work? What really happened with Russian election interference and the Mueller investigation? And more.
With refreshing candor, Rick shares his story, observations, and facts with the intent that readers form their own opinions and draw their own conclusions. The result is a thought-provoking account that informs and educates readers on both sides of the political aisle as we approach the 2020 election.
In up-close detail, Rick takes us through his personal journey to explain how Trump defied the odds, the polls, and even his own party to become the 45th president of the United States. He shares pivotal moments behind the scenes of the campaign and inauguration that have never been shared before, revealing critical decisions and political tactics that explain how Donald Trump was able to upset the entire Republican political establishment and beat a system built on centuries-old traditions. He also shows us how Donald Trump brought his personal brand to the presidency and how, in the end, the political establishment had no choice but to adapt to him—because Trump would never adapt to them.
Following the inauguration, Rick was entangled in the Robert Mueller investigation on Russian election interference. In Wicked Game, Rick lifts the veil to detail exactly what happened behind the operations of the Mueller probe, providing the first major account from an insider indicted in the investigation. In the government’s sentencing memo in their case against him, federal prosecutors took the unusual step of praising Rick for his “extraordinary assistance” in their efforts: “Gates has worked assiduously to provide truthful, complete, and reliable information,” they wrote. Which makes it all the more compelling when Rick’s account reveals the inadequacies of our legal system, and how a small group of people in Washington manipulated the political system for their own purposes—undermining our democracy in the process.
History has its eyes on America, and as people all over the world try to understand Trump’s presidency in a time of global crisis and uncertainty heading into the 2020 election, Rick’s powerful, firsthand account provides revealing and factual insights that he hopes Republicans and Democrats alike will learn from and apply as our nation moves forward.
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Wicked Game - Rick Gates
© 2020 by Rick Gates
All Rights Reserved
Cover art by Cody Corcoran
No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means without the written permission of the author and publisher.
Post Hill Press
New York • Nashville
posthillpress.com
Published in the United States of America
To my wife and children, whom I adore.
CONTENTS
Preface
The Election Campaign
1 The Job I Never Saw Coming
2 Candidate Trump
The Outsider No One Expected
3 The Political Party Battle
Trump vs. the Republican Establishment
4 Building Relationships Trump’s Way
The Foreign Policy Speech That Surprised the World
5 The Presumptive Nominee
The Russia Narrative and Vetting Vice Presidents
6 The Convention Begins
Choosing Pence, the Never-Trumpers’ Last Stand, and Clinching the Nomination
7 Shifting to the General Election
Trump Being Trump
8 Trump’s Campaign Shake-Up
An Unconventional Campaign Model That Worked
9 Trump’s Rhetoric
The Democrats’ Russia Narrative Rages and WikiLeaks Strikes
10 A Candidate and Campaign Tested
Debates, Hillary’s Weakness Shines, and Trump’s October Surprise
11 Election Shock
The Final Stretch, Comey’s Surprise, and the Night Trump Won
The Inauguration and Transition
12 The Peaceful Transition of Power
The People’s Inauguration and Washington’s Reluctance to Accept Trump
13 President Donald J. Trump
The Mueller Investigation and Aftermath
14 Mueller’s Investigation
What We Learned Then and Now
15 Lifting Mueller’s Curtain
What the American People Were Not Allowed to See
16 The Crucible
Pleading, Lessons Learned, and the Power of Faith, Family, and Friends
Afterword
Postface: The Unlikely Impact of a Former Soviet Country
Acknowledgments
Preface
It was time for Donald Trump to make his exit.
He had not only won the Indiana primary that night, but more importantly, Trump’s last remaining Republican rival, Senator Ted Cruz, had bowed out.
Which meant that Donald J. Trump had just become the Republican Party’s presumptive nominee
in the race to become the next president of the United States.
He celebrated the victory as he always did, surrounded by the comfort and loyalty of his family, behind a modest podium, not in Indiana but in front of a crowd full of press and a few hundred well-heeled supporters in the heart of Manhattan—where the rousing chorus of The Rolling Stones’ Start Me Up
now echoed off the pink marble walls in the cavernous lobby of Trump Tower.
Trump had shown remarkable restraint during his victory speech that night. He didn’t lob any personal attacks against Cruz. He didn’t disparage the rigged
primary system or the Republican establishment. He didn’t say anything remarkably over-the-top about how he’d beaten the entire Republican field at their own game to become the last man standing.
To the contrary, he praised Cruz as one of the toughest competitors in the field. He thanked the voters, recognizing their hard work and efforts, proudly stating that [w]e won with women, we won with men, we won with Hispanics, we won with African Americans, and we won with everybody.
He talked about healing our divided country and how [w]e are going to love each other
and [w]e are going to cherish each other.
Instead of going negative, he relished the victory and allowed the power of the moment to speak for itself.
Paul Manafort and I were beyond elated as we accompanied our candidate and his wife, Melania, on the walk from the Trump Tower hallway to the residential elevator. He moved deliberately, waving and nodding at a few people in the back of the lobby and shaking a few hands along the rope line on the way.
As we reached the elevator bank, the four of us quickly stepped in. The door closed.
There was a long silence.
Trump put his head down slightly, staring over at Melania as we rose toward his three-story penthouse on the sixty-sixth floor.
After a few seconds, Paul looked at Trump, proud that the outcome he had predicted for him in late March had now come true. Well, Donald,
he said, you are now one of only two people who will become the next president of the United States.
The weight of Paul’s sentence was enormous. But Trump barely glanced up.
It was the first time ever in the history of this country that a political outsider, a businessman and celebrity who had never held a political office in his life, had become the presumptive nominee from either party. I fully expected to see and hear some elation from Trump, some gratitude, some gravitas, or maybe some joy—something.
Instead, Trump just nodded his head and said, Oh.
After essentially winning the biggest upset in the history of the Republican Party, disrupting the protocols and expectations of more than two hundred years of precedent in presidential politics, achieving something almost no one in Washington (or anywhere else) imagined possible, and drawing the attention of the entire world while he did it, Donald Trump’s response was Oh.
On hundreds of occasions since his campaign began, Trump had defied expectations and assumptions like no one I had ever encountered. At times when I expected he might react strongly, his reactions were often measured. When something seemed insignificant, he might treat it like the most important moment in the world. Then on other occasions, he would do exactly the opposite.
The task of figuring out what made Donald Trump tick, of trying to anticipate what he might say or do, of trying to work with him while attempting to understand why he acted and reacted in the very unique ways he did, had proven to be one of the most intense and formidable challenges I had ever faced in my entire career in politics.
Yet clearly, I still had a lot to learn.
Looking back now, knowing what’s happened to our country since that turning point on the night of May 3, 2016, I sometimes wonder if Trump knew. While his detractors wound up stunned and bewildered in his wake, I sometimes wonder if he knew exactly what he was doing—and just how massively he was about to upend the world of politics as we knew it.
It’s staggering to think about. But I wasn’t the only one who had a lot more to learn.
In order to make sense of Trump—how he wins, and how he loses; how to work with him, or what it’s like to work against him; in order to be able to predict how he leads, where he might take us, and just where his followers might be willing to follow—we all had a lot to learn.
And we still do.
Donald Trump has forever changed the political landscape of the United States of America.
He has utilized skills learned over decades in business and transformed them into political tools that have enabled him to galvanize supporters and soundly beat establishment politicians on both sides of the political aisle. And it seems no matter how hard he punches—or how hard his opponents try to knock him down—he always winds up on top.
No matter which side you happen to be on, there is one truth we all need to grasp: Donald Trump isn’t going away, and the impact of his actions, his words, and his style of winning will continue to impact this country—and the world—for decades to come, if not more.
Whether we want to understand Trump as a means to learn to survive and thrive in the world in which he operates, whether we want to reelect him or defeat him, we first have to understand him. How he got elected, how he wins, how he challenges the media and talks directly to his base in a way that no one ever thought possible; what he’s thinking, what he’s not thinking, how he’s influenced (or not influenced) by the voices around him; why he seemingly embraces other world leaders who are enemies to the United States; what it all means to the present and future of our complex political system, and how he exposes our long-established institutions in ways that hardly anyone ever sees coming—all of it matters.
Americans have largely ignored this notion of learning
about Trump. His opponents have derided him. They’ve complained about him, loudly, while his supporters have rallied around him. But during the 2016 campaign and election, the Democrats and many establishment Republicans alike refused to acknowledge Trump’s strengths and instead determined that he was not going to be around politics long enough to care.
That attitude was a mistake.
The disruption that Donald Trump brought to Washington exposed and amplified everything that is wrong with our political system, in all of its divisiveness, on both sides. And that amplification has now spilled over into our justice system, and our media, and into the social and financial fabric of our everyday lives to the point where nearly everything we cherish as a nation is fraught with tension, dysfunction, division, and in some cases, outright hatred. We can’t even talk about our political differences anymore without breaking into arguments at the family dinner table or tearing each other apart on social media. Or, in some cases, confronting each other right out in the streets.
If we want to fix it, we first have to endeavor to understand how we got here. If we don’t? If Liberals keep busy blaming everything on Trump, and the Republicans keep blaming everything on the Liberals, we will only continue to lose. And right now, in the current state of global chaos, we’re losing our economic power, any semblance of our democratic values, and our country’s dominance and respect around the world.
I know this is difficult for some readers to hear, but Trump didn’t do this
to us. We did this. We, the American people. Through our overall lack of participation in the political process, we allowed a dangerous status quo to grow for decades, a state in which many Americans were (and still are) so completely fed up with their own government that they were willing to take a chance on a political outsider, a celebrity businessman who promised to drain the swamp
and Make America Great Again.
Donald Trump stepped into that role with ease. And while some may say he’s only exacerbated our problems ever since, we cannot ignore the fact that Trump’s presence has exposed many of our government’s (and our society’s) shortcomings and failures in ways that they’ve never been exposed before now.
My hope is that by sharing my experience inside Donald Trump’s campaign for the presidency, as well as my experience as a target of and key witness for the Mueller investigation on Russia collusion, readers from both sides of the political aisle will open their eyes to just how broken our systems actually are, so we can put an end to the infighting, and begin to repair the damage that has been done.
In the government’s sentencing memo in their case against me, federal prosecutors took the unusual step of praising me for my extraordinary assistance
in their efforts. Gates has worked assiduously to provide truthful, complete, and reliable information,
they wrote. The government concluded that under exceedingly difficult circumstances and under intense public scrutiny, Gates has worked earnestly to provide the government with everything it has asked of him.
I hope and earnestly pray that no person is ever subjected to the process that I experienced. But with that same forthrightness and truth, what I offer to you in this book is a factual account, to the best of my recollection, of the rise of Donald Trump, how and why he won, the campaign operations that brought him to victory, and a look behind the curtain of a justice system that acted against him—and, by proxy, me—for what I firmly believe were purely political motives.
Why do I believe that?
One: Because there’s ample concrete evidence to support it.
And Two: Because it’s nothing new. This is how Washington has always worked.
Politics is a tool that is often weaponized for personal gain.
Almost from the beginning of our existence, politics has acted as the crucible that determines those chosen to lead our country. And presidential politics have always been fraught with a degree of gamesmanship, including more than a few dirty tricks and October surprises
along the way. Even in February of 1796, while Vice President John Adams was preparing to run in the very first election that didn’t include George Washington, he penned a letter home to his wife, Abigail, stating that he wished to remain a silent spectator in this silly and wicked game.
Of course, in certain games, silence is a strategy.
Historians suggest that behind the scenes, John Adams made more than a few silent
moves to try to ensure his win over Thomas Jefferson—that he may have strong-armed a few members of the Electoral College (who were congressmembers, in those days) in order to sway their votes—to ensure that they voted for him instead of siding with the voters of their own states.
In the final results, after a campaign full of insults and innuendos that set the stage for every campaign since, Adams won the presidency by an electoral vote of seventy-one to sixty-eight.
The magic number of seventy-one votes was exactly the number Adams needed in order to secure the win, and if any two of the three Adams electors in Pennsylvania, Virginia, or North Carolina had voted with their states, Jefferson would have received nine more electoral votes.
Which means Jefferson would have been our second president.
Just four years later, the 1800 election battle between Thomas Jefferson and John Adams was once again fraught with slander, acrimony, and behind-the-scenes attacks. As a result of a tie in electoral votes, the House of Representatives was once again tasked to select the president, as directed by the Constitution. After thirty-five ballots cast with no winner, one person—Alexander Hamilton—was able to use his tremendous skills as a political operative to persuade a few congressmen to change their minds. And just like that, Thomas Jefferson became our third president.
Some might say Hamilton was a hero. Some might argue he was diabolical.
Either way, the precedents were set.
When Donald Trump, the penultimate political outsider, made a bid for the presidency in 2016, he did so while ignoring any semblance of political tradition or decorum. He put all of his personal motivations, his hatred of the system, and his nationalist desires and personal feelings about politicians and others right out in the open, for everyone to see. He approached the wicked game
like no candidate before him, and forced everyone else to play the game on his terms.
And he won.
His victory sent shockwaves through a political system that hadn’t changed in more than two hundred years. A system that did not want to change. And as that system has attempted to reject him ever since, Trump’s very presence in the White House and the unprecedented dynamic it unleashed in Washington have shaken our country to its core.
As a student of politics who studied government at William & Mary before earning my master’s degree in public policy at George Washington University, I always had a passion for the subject. I even thought I might run for office one day. But after getting involved in my first presidential campaign in 1996, and seeing firsthand just how ugly the process was—exactly two hundred years after Adams gave the election process its wicked game
moniker—I knew I never would.
It takes a certain disposition, demeanor, and detachment to run for the presidency, knowing that the media, other politicians, adversaries, and the world at large will invade every part of your life.
Trump was better prepared for all of it than anyone ever expected. More than that, he knew how to counter the invasions, on all fronts, and turn them to his advantage.
As a result, his opponents, in all reaches of the government, were forced to adapt to Trump in ways they never imagined. Even some formerly mild-mannered politicians and bureaucrats have gone to new lows or extremes in search of their own victories in this wicked game.
I have written this book, in this pivotal reelection year, after everything I’ve endured, because I love this country—and because I know that we cannot stand for this wicked game
to continue unabated. If we do, there is a very good chance that the democratic values we stand for as a nation will soon be in jeopardy, if they are not already. Not for a presidential cycle or two, but forever.
By sharing my experiences with Donald Trump, along with insights about the political landscape that allowed him to rise in the first place, and by exposing the truth about the opposing forces that caused every one of us to endure the chaos of these last few years, my hope is that we can begin to make some real changes.
To bring an end to the divisiveness that grips our nation.
We must learn from our mistakes, consider where we stand, and determine where we want to go as a nation.
We are not only Republicans or Democrats.
We are Americans, first and foremost.
The Election Campaign
Chapter 1
The Job I Never Saw Coming
In late January of 2016, Paul Manafort asked me to start build ing a detailed memo on the Republican presidential primary process.
Paul didn’t tell me which candidate the information was for, but what he wanted seemed pretty straightforward: a breakdown of the Republican Party delegate system, state by state, pinpointing the number of delegates needed in order to win the nomination, and the rules and procedures that those delegates would have to abide by at the Republican National Convention in July.
That’s how it all started for me. With a research assignment for an anonymous client.
The request itself caught me off guard. I had no indication until that moment that my boss wanted to dive back into American politics. Paul had a long and storied career as a political consultant, having guided both Gerald Ford and Ronald Reagan to their respective wins. But the last presidential campaign he’d worked on in any official capacity was Bob Dole’s bid in 1996. Since that time, he’d been working almost exclusively overseas, as he and his business partner, Rick Davis, consulted with and ran campaigns for major international candidates and political parties in a total of seventy-two countries over the years. Their clients included major political dynasties, such as the Kirchner family in Argentina, and such prominent individuals as President Juan Carlos Varela in Panama and Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto in Pakistan.
I had met Paul briefly, and Rick as well, in the summer of 1995, when I worked as a full-time intern for Charlie Black, one of Paul’s partners in their public affairs firm—Black, Manafort, Stone and Kelly—one of the largest bipartisan political affairs firms in the world. I did so while simultaneously going to night school, where I was working on my master’s degree in public policy at George Washington University. I spent nearly a decade after that working as a government relations consultant in the gaming industry, addressing issues both in the U.S. and abroad before I agreed to join Rick Davis at their new firm, Davis Manafort Partners, in 2006. Soon after, Rick left the firm to work on John McCain’s presidential campaign, and I started working with Paul, whom I barely knew at the time. I’d had the privilege to work directly on political campaigns and elections globally, including in parts of Europe and Latin America. But for the last ten years, most of our work had been in Ukraine; and most recently Paul had been actively working to rebuild the political party of ousted Ukraine President Viktor Yanukovych.
In all of these instances, Paul’s reputation for political strategy preceded him. It is no exaggeration to say that in the rest of the world, it was generally assumed that if Paul came on board with his expertise at building candidates and political parties using an American campaign model, whichever candidate or party he worked for was likely to win. He was that good at what he did. Running international electoral work was challenging but more profitable than U.S. campaigns—a compelling reason why so many U.S. political consultants take their tradecraft abroad. In addition, many years earlier, Paul had helped found the precursor to the National Democratic Institute to promote democratic values in foreign countries. Paul always believed that U.S. presidential elections were the pinnacle of global politics, and winning a U.S. presidential election at this stage in his career would give him the accolades he so desired after being on the outside of U.S. campaigns for so long.
This was going to be his swan song.
In mid-February 2016, Paul finally told me who my research project was for: Republican candidate Donald J. Trump.
My first question was, Why would Trump need this sort of basic research when primary season is already almost halfway over?
It was the kind of research that would typically be done at the very start of a campaign, even before a candidate announced that he or she was running. But in the coming weeks, the answer would become glaringly clear: Donald Trump and his staff did not fully understand how the process worked.
Even after successfully bulldozing his way through twenty-one state primaries, winning the vast majority of them while knocking all but five of his sixteen Republican opponents out of the race, he had little understanding of the intricacies of the primary system.
He didn’t understand the various rules and technicalities concerning how state delegates would cast their votes at the Republican National Convention, which is pivotal to actually winning the Republican nomination.
He did not fully grasp that unless all of the other leading Republican contenders dropped out and united behind him, he would go into a contested
convention and could potentially lose the nomination at that point—despite winning the majority of primaries.
Ever since he had announced his candidacy in June of 2015, Trump had moved forward under the assumption that the primary process was simple: that whenever he won a state, he actually won that state; that all of the delegates from that state automatically were pledged to him. Whether his staff never explained it to him, or whether he’d simply ignored the complex details of the delegate process, he kept on assuming that whichever way the people voted, the delegates were bound to follow the will of the people; that a win was a win, and therefore the convention was nothing more than a celebration and coronation of the nominee.
Of course, that isn’t how presidential primaries work at all, on either side of the political aisle. The national conventions are much more than just TV events. The delegates who come to the convention from certain states can attempt to vote their conscience or to switch their blocs of votes to support a candidate other than the one their state’s voters chose.
It’s not all that dissimilar to what happens in the general election, in which—as most people are quite aware today—the Electoral College and not the popular vote dictates the winner. But the primary process is much more complicated, and purposefully so.
To put it bluntly: The nominating systems of both major parties in the United States of America are not designed by the people, for the people. Instead, they’re systems designed by the few, to benefit the few. Specifically party leaders. And the last person these systems were built to benefit is an outsider—like Trump.
Lucky for him, he had a couple of friends and close advisors who recognized this particular blind spot. Political operative Roger Stone and billionaire real estate investor Tom Barrack were both trying to persuade Trump that he needed to hire an experienced political operative to help get him through the convention. And they both told him the best man for the job was none other than their friend, Paul Manafort.
I was Manafort’s right-hand man at that point. A junior partner
at Davis Manafort, one of five employees. I wasn’t an equity partner in the firm. I mostly worked from an office in my home in Richmond, Virginia, while Paul did more of the traveling back and forth to Ukraine.
There was just one problem: despite Stone and Barrack’s prodding, and Trump’s apparent admiration of Paul’s political skills, the man showed little to no interest in hiring Paul, or even taking a meeting with him initially. The media was salivating over the idea that the Republican National Convention was going to be a contested convention, but given Trump’s success in January and February and his status as the growing front-runner, he thought he had it all under control. Trump was winning more primaries than anyone.
He already had the best people
on his team. He was doing unbelievable.
He was going to win,
he told them.
Trump’s optimism came crashing down in March.
Trump won the Louisiana primary on March 5, but a few days later, he read a headline that drove him crazy: more than half of the Louisiana delegates came out and publicly stated that