Article snippet: The TAKE with Rick Klein Washington has gotten used to President Donald Trump as a disruptor, with political instincts that push him toward division and conflict. Now comes a legacy-defining week that will test those instincts, at home and abroad. Trump's NATO ambassador, Kay Bailey Hutchison, is promising a NATO summit that will emphasize the alliance's "strength and unity." It will be up to the president to make good on that theme, at a moment when trade wars are beginning to rage, a summit with Vladimir Putin looms, and the U.S. finds itself increasingly isolated. And with his nomination of a Supreme Court justice Monday night, President Trump has a chance to unite at least his own party – or make the kind of choice top Senate Republicans have warned him against. "They can get anybody confirmed," Leonard Leo, the former Federalist Society chief who is advising the president on judicial nominations, said on ABC's "This Week," referring to potential teamwork by the White House and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. Leo might be right. But not necessarily, now that the nomination will move from hypotheticals to a real person with a very real record. The RUNDOWN with MaryAlice Parks First on ABC News – The conservative political advocacy organization, Judicial Crisis Network, plans to launch another major ad campaign with spots online and on cable TV promoting President Trump's nominee for the Supreme Court as soon as the president makes his p... Link to the full article to read more