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Steve Bannon reportedly called Paul Ryan a 'limp-d*** motherf***** born in a petri dish'

A new book reveals the depths of the feud between Mr Bannon and the Speaker of the House

Emily Shugerman
New York
Tuesday 18 July 2017 10:19 EDT
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Speaker of the House Paul Ryan looks on during a press conference following a closed-door House GOP conference meeting on Capitol Hill
Speaker of the House Paul Ryan looks on during a press conference following a closed-door House GOP conference meeting on Capitol Hill (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

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The feud between House Speaker Paul Ryan and presidential adviser Steve Bannon is no secret in Washington, where the two men have warred on everything from healthcare to immigration. But a new book by Bloomberg reporter Joshua Green shows just how vicious – and personal – that feud has become.

According to Mr Green, Mr Bannon flew off the handle when he learned of a Republican plot to install Mr Ryan as the presidential nominee at the 2016 Republican National Convention.

At the headquarters of his far-right publication, Breitbart News, Mr Bannon unloaded on Mr Ryan as a “limp-d**k motherf***** who was born in a petri dish at the Heritage Foundation,” a conservative think tank.

In Devil’s Bargain: Steve Bannon, Donald Trump, and the Storming of the Presidency, Mr Green argues that the Speaker exemplified just the kind of traditional conservative politics Mr Bannon hoped to upset.

A strong supporter of the emerging “alt-right,” Mr Bannon threatened to rally their young, far-right forces against Mr Ryan.

“Pepe’s gonna stomp their ass,” he reportedly said, referring to the movement's cartoon frog mascot.

Mr Bannon cemented his dislike for Mr Ryan in his role as chairman of Breitbart News, which frequently went after the Speaker during the presidential campaign.

According to Mr Green, the Breitbart co-founder hired one writer – Julia Hahn – specifically to write negative articles on Mr Ryan, with titles such as “He's With Her: Inside Paul Ryan's Months-Long Campaign to Elect Hillary Clinton”. Ms Hahn is now a special assistant to the President.

Mr Bannon also reportedly instructed Breitbart staff to “destroy” Mr Ryan, telling them, “Paul Ryan is the enemy”. In a December 2015 email obtained by The Hill, Mr Bannon told staff that the “long game” for the site was to have Ryan “gone” by the spring.

Some Breitbart contributors, like Roger Stone, say this mentality has been passed down to the staff at Breitbart in Mr Bannon’s absence.

In March, for instance, shortly after the Congressional Budget Office released a damning report on Mr Ryan’s health care plan, Breitbart posted audiotape of the Speaker bashing then-nominee Mr Trump in a conference call with House Republicans. The website denies Mr Bannon was involved with the publication of the article.

Asked about Breitbart’s controversial coverage of him in November, Mr Ryan was reserved.

“I’m not looking backwards; I’m looking forward,” he said. “I’m looking to the future and I’m looking forward to how we make this work for the American people and how we make President Trump the most successful president in a lifetime."

But according to Mr Green, Republicans had their own disparaging words for Mr Bannon in private. Beltway Republicans, the reporter says, saw Mr Trump's campaign manager as an “Internet-era update of the Slim Pickens character in ‘Dr. Strangelove’ who rides the bomb like a rodeo bull, whoopin’ and hollerin’ all the way to nuclear annihilation".

The White House could not be immediately reached for comment.

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