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Trump's obsessive desire for revenge is beginning to frustrate his close allies, report says

donald trump
President Donald J. Trump in the Cabinet Room at the White House on March 11, 2020. Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images

Close allies of Former President Donald Trump are reportedly growing increasingly frustrated over his obsession with getting revenge on people he thinks have wronged him, according to a report by the Washington Post.

Republican leadership and Trump allies told the Post they wish he was working to protect his administration's policies and helping the GOP in 2022 as opposed to wasting his time on "petty rivalries and grievances."

The report cites interviews with 13 former White House officials, advisors, and allies, most of whom asked to remain anonymous.

"All the 2022 stuff is, 'Well, what's in it for me?' " one former senior White House official told the Post when summarizing Trump's current mindset.

Read more: Trump hired dozens of lawyers from 2 law firms. Only one has been hiring them back.

Several former senior White House advisors told the Post that Trump is desperate to remain at the center of national attention. According to The Hill, social media chatter about the former president has fallen by around 91% since he was banned from Facebook and Twitter.

The ex-president is also trying to maintain total control over the Republican base while plotting his revenge to take down Republican lawmakers who voted to impeach him for inciting the January 6 Capitol riot.

He continues to stoke false claims the election was stolen and in the last few weeks has become fixated on Arizona and Georgia after those states flipped for President Joe Biden in the November election.

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President Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida. Charles Trainor Jr./Miami Herald/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

The sources also claim that Trump is still so obsessed with his election loss that he refuses to move forward with plans for his presidential library. Another report earlier this year claimed he told GOP donors he wanted to raise $2 billion for the library, which he plans on building in Florida.

While Trump has previously hinted at a presidential run in 2024, no formal announcement has been made yet.

Two advisors told the Post that if he were to run, the announcement would not be expected until after the midterm elections.

His indecision about his own run is another reason allies have become "frustrated" in the last few weeks, according to a CNN report from last month. According to the report, the fear the ex-president is blowing his chance to "take control of the GOP early on."

Read the original article on Business Insider