LAS VEGAS — Donald J. Trump has shaken up his presidential campaign for the second time in two months, hiring a top executive from the conservative news site Breitbart News and promoting a senior adviser to a key new role in an effort to right his faltering campaign.
Stephen Bannon, the executive chairman of Breitbart News LLC, will become the Republican campaign’s chief executive, and Kellyanne Conway, a senior adviser and pollster for Mr. Trump and his running mate, Gov. Mike Pence of Indiana, will become the campaign manager.
Paul Manafort, the campaign chairman, will retain his title. But the staffing change, hammered out on Sunday and set to be formally announced Wednesday morning, represents a demotion for Mr. Manafort, who took control of the campaign nearly two months after Mr. Trump won the primary in Indiana, forcing the remaining two candidates from the race.
The news, first reported by The Wall Street Journal, was confirmed by four people in and close to the Trump campaign.
The people briefed on the move said that it reflects Mr. Trump’s realization that his campaign was at a crisis point. But it indicates that the candidate, who has chafed at making the types of changes his current aides have asked for even though he has acknowledged they would need to be made, has decided to embrace his aggressive style for the duration of the race.
Both Mr. Bannon and Ms. Conway are close with Robert and Rebekah Mercer, the father-and-daughter conservative donors who have become allies of Mr. Trump and are funding a “super PAC” that is working against Hillary Clinton.
Ms. Conway has past presidential experience in primary races, but the role in a general election represents a new one for her. She is well liked by Mr. Trump’s daughter, Ivanka, and his son-in-law, Jared Kushner, who had been serving as the de facto campaign manager.
Stephen Bannon, a top executive for Breitbart News, will become the campaign’s chief executive.
Mr. Bannon has no experience with political campaigns, but he represents the type of bare-knuckled fighter that the candidate had in Corey Lewandowski, his combative former campaign manager, who was fired on June 20.
Mr. Bannon has been a supporter of Mr. Trump’s pugilistic instincts, which the candidate has made clear in interviews he is uncertain about whether he wants to suppress. He is also deeply mistrustful of the political establishment, and his website has often been critical of House Speaker Paul D. Ryan and Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader.
Rudolph W. Giuliani, the former mayor of New York City who has become a close Trump adviser, has also urged the candidate to dig in and prepare to fight harder, and in a more focused way, in what has quickly become one of the nastiest presidential campaigns in modern United States history.
It was not clear what the promotions would mean for Mr. Manafort, who had initially been hired to steer Mr. Trump through what appeared to be a protracted fight for delegates.
Mr. Manafort rose in power after repeated clashes with Mr. Lewandowski, who was ultimately fired with the help of Mr. Trump’s adult children, who believed the campaign manager was trying to spread negative stories about Mr. Kuhsner.
Mr. Lewandowski, now a paid CNN commentator, has denied that it was the case, and he and Mr. Trump still speak frequently, with the candidate seeking his advice.
Mr. Lewandowski’s troubles began, in part, when he was accused by a female Breitbart reporter, who worked for Mr. Bannon, of grabbing her roughly after a news conference at one of his Florida properties. He was charged with assault, but prosecutors declined to proceed with the case, which was dropped.
People briefed on the reshuffling were adamant that Mr. Trump’s children would seek to block a return by Mr. Lewandowski. And they insisted that staff departures resulting from the changes would be few.
The candidate has bucked repeated efforts to rein in his impulsive behavior, committing repeated gaffes after telling he aides he planned to adopt a more presidential tone.
His behavior has angered the party’s top figures, who have openly expressed concern about preserving Republican majorities in the House and Senate in light of Mr. Trump’s performance in the polls.
The moves were hammered out on Sunday in meetings at Mr. Trump’s golf club at Bedminster, N.J. Roger Ailes, the former head of Fox News, also met with Mr. Trump that day, as The Times reported on Tuesday, and he will be part of efforts to prepare Mr. Trump in his debate against Mrs. Clinton and with other tasks, according to three people briefed on the discussions.
Mr. Manafort had also come under increasing scrutiny over his ties to Ukraine for elections he worked on as an international consultant, including handwritten ledgers showing he was designated to receive $12.7 million in undisclosed cash payments from a pro-Russian political party from 2007 to 2012. Yet it remains to be seen whether a new chain of command can ultimately fix the problem: the candidate’s lack of discipline and desire to punch back at nearly any critic.
After a series of recent controversies — including Mr. Trump’s assertion that Russia should hack Mrs. Clinton’s emails; his criticism of a Muslim-American Gold Star family; and his suggestion that Second Amendment supporters could revolt against Mrs. Clinton — the candidate began trying anew to appear moderated in tone.
On Monday, he delivered a speech on terrorism using a teleprompter rather than the off-the-cuff style he prefers, and on Tuesday he offered yet another scripted address, this time on law and order.
Mr. Pence, too, has privately worked to quell the growing concerns surrounding the Republican ticket. At the annual meeting of the Republican Governors Association in Colorado on Tuesday, Mr. Pence used his keynote speech to offer “encouragement” — a word he used several times — and reassurance to the crowd.
“We’re still winning hearts and minds every day despite an avalanche of negative media coverage,” Mr. Pence said during the closed-door session, according to audio provided to The New York Times.
Time, Mr. Pence added, was on their side. “It’s preseason, for heaven’s sake,” he said. “The gun starts on Labor Day.”
I never said it was a one-sided failure but the GOP has moved more and more rightwards until it has boxed itself in, away from effective policies. Its answer to everything seems to be tax-cuts and reduced government at a time when voters—yes, even Republican voters—are looking for a more active and interventionist federal government. Trump has succeeded because he wants the federal government to build The Wall, raise tariffs, deport illegal immigrants, tighten immigration restrictions and bully American companies into bringing manufacturing jobs back to America.
You've got a lot packed into this and I have to make dinner yet. I'll start with the first paragraph.
Much of what Trump has pitched/promised runs counter to decades of GOP rhetoric. Tariffs, trade restrictions, undoing trade deals—these are not a rightward drift, this is a drunkard's walk. The immigrant bashing has also been denounced by some of the more-traditional Republican leaders, including both surviving former presidents. The other primary candidates were afraid to call him on this because they didn't want to alienate his supporters—fresh blood coming into the party was what everybody said they wanted. Seems to me that's a crowd they could do without, but their base is aging out. There aren't enough old white bible-thumpers out there to carry them anymore.
There are people in the GOP who aren't stuck in the 1950s but the party has treated them about as well as the Democrats treated Sanders. It's their show and I absolutely get that they want to remain true to their ideals, incoherent and contradictory as they are. I'm fine with them going down with the ship but Trump hijacked that ship. The old guard wanted nothing to do with him. If you don't believe me check how many of them found something more important to do than attend the convention this year.
Sorry, the rest will have to wait. Got fresh broccoli from the garden to turn into dinner.
Edit: and the rest will be in the Hillary thread, 'cuz this one is for bashing Trump.
You really need to relax and accept the facts. I have. You should be jumping for joy.
I'd argue that we fix what we can. Can we fix who's gonna be President? Doubt it.
Can we make local changes including who's in Congress? More likely.
Can we all sit around holding our breath in between bouts of insulting each other, never being able to fix the ills of the nation because no one can compromise or talk like an adult? Oh, I have no doubt. Precedent is on my side with that one.
And how much are you charging the donald for renting space in your head ?
Help us out here, kurtster: does Trumpers believe that Obama is the founder of ISIS? Or was Trump being sarcastic? Or did he forget to take his Aricept?
Trump's doing a better job of destroying his own election chances than the Democratic party could dream of doing. He stands a great chance of making the GOP lose its control of the Senate. He has become an object lesson of the ugliest aspects of America.
We ain't gonna take you Never did and never will We forsake you Gonna rape you Let's forget you better still
Have a good weekend, kurtster.
You sure are spending a lot of time worrying about someone who doesn't have a snowball's chance in hell of winning. While I may support him, I have no illusion of him winning. It's Hillary's to lose. She'll kill him in the debates. Oops, I meant to say she will beat him. Damn, what I mean to say is that she will humiliate Trump in the debates. She has all the facts on her side and a resume a mile long. She's unbeat, oops there I go again, she's unstoppable. 4 more years of Obama, here we come ! And you just know that she will appoint Obama to the SCOTUS first chance she gets. Its his reward for keeping the DOJ off her back.
You really need to relax and accept the facts. I have. You should be jumping for joy.
And how much are you charging the donald for renting space in your head ?
Help us out here, kurtster: does Trumpers believe that Obama is the founder of ISIS? Or was Trump being sarcastic? Or did he forget to take his Aricept?
Trump's doing a better job of destroying his own election chances than the Democratic party could dream of doing. He stands a great chance of making the GOP lose its control of the Senate. He has become an object lesson of the ugliest aspects of America.