Las Vegas Sun

March 29, 2024

Wynn brokers private meeting between Trump and Rove, who have clashed

Steve Wynn Electronics for Imaging Keynote

Steve Marcus

Steve Wynn, right, chairman and CEO of Wynn Resorts, waits to be introduced at the Electronics For Imaging conference at Wynn Las Vegas, Tuesday, Jan. 19, 2016. Wynn recently hosted a get-together for Karl Rove and Donald Trump at his Manhattan home.

Karl Rove, the architect of George W. Bush’s victorious presidential campaigns and founder of a constellation of political fundraising groups, has called Donald Trump “a complete idiot.” He has described him as “graceless and divisive.” He has said Trump’s boasts about beating Hillary Clinton in the polls are false.

Trump has reacted with anger to such insults, calling Rove “sad” and questioning his record of success.

But two weeks ago, Trump and Rove held a secret meeting as the presumptive Republican nominee was courting major party figures.

The meeting took place at the Manhattan home of casino magnate Steve Wynn, a mutual friend who brokered the get-together, according to two people briefed on the meeting and who were granted anonymity to discuss the gathering.

Trump’s campaign manager, Corey Lewandowski, described it as a “good meeting,” but did not elaborate. An aide to Wynn did not respond to an email seeking comment, and Rove similarly declined to respond.

The purpose of the meeting was unclear, although Rove is the last strategist to help elect a Republican president, and Trump is lagging organizationally for the upcoming general election.

If détente was the goal, the meeting did not appear to have a lasting effect: The morning after Trump’s freewheeling, media-bashing news conference Tuesday, Rove was deeply critical of his performance.

“I’m not certain it helps him with the people who are swing voters, up for grabs, and it certainly is very unpresidential,” Rove said on Fox News. “It would not be a good spectacle for our country to have a President Trump acting like candidate Trump acted yesterday.”

The tense relationship between Trump and Rove has deeper significance than just resolving their public sparring. Rove has longstanding relationships with many of the party’s biggest donors, and has intricate knowledge of how super PACs can help elect candidates.

Rove also has a long relationship with Sheldon Adelson, another casino magnate who has said he would spend upward of $100 million to back Trump. Adelson and Trump met Tuesday, their second meeting in the past few weeks.

Rove has talked with Adelson about what super PAC to use as a vehicle for donating such a large sum of money to support Trump, including possibly using the Crossroads fundraising groups, which he helped establish, according to people with knowledge of the discussions.

Adelson is also discussing the possibility of creating a new entity that would back Trump, and has been holding talks with Nick Ayers, the former executive director of the Republican Governors Association, according to two people briefed on the discussions. Ayers’ involvement was first reported by the website Politico.

Creating a new group would give Adelson more control over how his money is spent, at a moment when there are a number of super PACs that either exist or are being formed to support Trump’s bid. Other major donors, such as Rebekah Mercer, who supported the presidential campaign of Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, are considering backing Trump through other super PACs.

Super PACs cannot coordinate with campaigns. But so far, the Trump campaign hasn’t signaled formally whether any group has its tacit blessing. In two cases, former aides to the campaign have gone to work for super PACs that support Trump, despite “cooling-off periods” mandated by campaign finance laws when transitions like that take place.

One super PAC supporting Trump is run by a former aide to Ben Carson. Another proposed group, which would be backed by Tom Barrack, a financier and close friend of Trump’s, was officially created Thursday, with more than $30 million in commitments, according to a CNN report.

Yet another group is being advised by Edward J. Rollins, the strategist who was Ronald Reagan’s campaign manager and has deep ties to the Republican Party.

That group has faced scrutiny over its ad-buying practices, although it has donor meetings planned with prominent figures such as financier Julian H. Robertson Jr. But in a recent meeting with Trump, former Secretary of State James A. Baker was critical of Rollins, according to two people briefed on the exchange.

Rollins and Baker were rivals during the 1980 Republican primary race between Reagan and George H.W. Bush. In an email, Rollins said he had signed on to help in an unusual year.

“If others think they can do it better, have at it!” Rollins said in an email. “It is going to be a tough and expensive campaign and I would assume Mr. Trump and his team would want all the help they can get!”

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