OPINION

Hang in there!

In an extraordinary interview with the New York Times, President Donald Trump was inappropriately critical of Attorney General Jeff Sessions. It is stunning that a president would so publicly criticize one of his most loyal senior supporters. Trump's interview was almost an invitation for Sessions to resign. The attorney general should not do so.

Jeff Sessions, please hang in there.

There are many good people serving in this administration, under difficult circumstances. The circumstances are not difficult because of a foreign threat, economic calamity or effective political opposition. They are difficult because of the conduct, temperament and character of the president.

Nonetheless, it is vital that the good people who function as the anchors of the Trump administration stay in place and serve for as long as they can. Without them, things would be worse. The American political system could become more fragile and our country could be in peril.

It is easy to see how people such as national security adviser H.R. McMaster and Defense Secretary Jim Mattis are pivotal to ensuring the worst does not happen. Their presence guarantees that America's weapons arsenal is safe and our defenses are at the ready. But there are also scores of other White House staff members and executive agency leaders who are vital to keeping some semblance of a rational functioning of the bureaucracy.

Jeff Sessions is one such person. He knows what to do as attorney general and what is best for the country--even if the president does not. We owe Sessions and others more because they are serving in the Trump administration, not less.

Trump is erratic and too often unappreciative of those serving in his administration. He is unnecessarily dismissive of their contributions and peddles unsubstantiated mistruths that degrade morale throughout the White House, his administration and the entire federal government.

Given the president's predilection to throwing anyone and everyone around him under the bus when times are tough, I worry that there could be a wholesale exodus from the administration after the midterm elections (if not before) and an inability to refill vital posts with good people.

So, to Sessions and others who are serving in the Trump administration, remember that your commitment may not always be to the man, Donald Trump, but to the institution that you serve and to the presidency itself.

Even if the president fails to realize that he needs good people around him, the fact is, America needs good people. Perhaps that much is true now more than ever and becoming more true as conditions deteriorate. The honorable thing to do at a time like this is not quit, but stay and try to keep the worst from happening.

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Ed Rogers is a political consultant and a veteran of the Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush White Houses.

Editorial on 07/21/2017

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