Breaking: Trump fires Chief of Staff John Kelly

Spectrum

Elite Poster
BGOL Investor
90


Nick Ayers is Trump's next chief of staff — unless his enemies can stop him
raw


Boosters of Nick Ayers, currently Vice President Mike Pence's chief of staff, say he would be a perfect antidote to the political challenges of the next two years. | Drew Angerer/Getty Images



President Trump informally offered the top job to the young White House aide last month. Then the knives came out.

By NANCY COOK, ANDREW RESTUCCIA and GABBY ORR


12/07/2018 06:25 PM EST

For the past month, Nick Ayers has been a White House chief of staff in waiting.

President Donald Trump informally offered Ayers a job as his top aide during a private huddle at an election night party in the White House residence last month. Several White House staff and advisers were within earshot and overheard the conversation, which included First Lady Melania Trump, and its details were described to POLITICO by two people briefed on them.

It seemed like a done deal, except for one complication: The position wasn’t open yet. John Kelly was still hanging on to the job, however tenuously. White House officials now believe that will finally change, saying they expect Kelly to exit any day now.

That would seem to clear the way for Ayers. But the lag time allowed a month-long lobbying campaign both for and against the 36-year-old Ayers, currently Vice President Mike Pence’s top aide. Ayers' detractors — who consider him nakedly ambitious and untrustworthy — have lobbied Trump against following through on the offer. Some top White House aides have even threatened to resign if he does.

"People are threatened by Nick's age and his reputation as this young political savant," said one former White House official. “He has the endorsements of Jared [Kushner], Ivanka [Trump], and Pence, but not a lot of fans beyond that. That's not to say the majority of the

As a result, it is unclear whether Trump’s offer still stands, although White House officials say that no clear alternative has emerged.

Ayers’ boosters say he would be a perfect antidote to the political challenges of the next two years, including House Democratic investigations and a coming 2020 election campaign.

“The problem with Kelly is you just can’t have the least the least political person in Washington holding the most political job in Washington. You need a bona fide Machiavellian killer. That is what the president needs by his side over the next two years,” said a second former White House official in describing Ayers.

One White House official said he did not believe the Ayers opposition would sway the president, noting that Trump has a strong desire to install a more politically-minded aide as his chief of staff ahead of the 2020 reelection campaign.

Alex Conant, who worked alongside Ayers during Tim Pawlenty’s failed 2012 presidential bid, praised Ayers on Friday as a results-oriented operative. (Ayers, who ran Pawlenty’s campaign, was later criticized for his management.)

“If President Trump hires him, I expect it is because Nick is someone who runs a tight ship and will manage a team to get the results the boss wants,” said Conant, now a partner at the firm Firehouse Strategies. “He’ll be able to avoid some of the mistakes Kelly and [former chief of staff Reince] Priebus made. He also knows a ton of politicians, given the breadth of his experience over the last 15 years — not to mention, he is very popular with the donor class. Even though he is young, he brings a lot of to any institution.”

In recent days, the internal conversation inside the White House has shifted to the best way to grant Kelly a graceful exit. This comes just five months after Trump and Kelly assured staffers that Kelly would remain in place through the 2020 campaign – a claim that few aides and advisers believed at the time.

White House officials are hoping that Kelly will be able to resign instead of being fired by tweet. First Lady Melania Trump has been urging the president not to fire a four-star general but instead allow him to leave on his own terms. Her spokeswoman did not respond to requests for comment.

Until then, both White House aides and close allies call Ayers the frontrunner to take his place, even as they stress that no Trump decision is final until the president himself announces it, and that an informal job offer isn’t ironclad. In the meantime, Trump — who likes to beta-test his personnel decisons —has been asking confidants their opinions about Ayers since July.

Ayers did not respond to a request for comment.

Longtime Trump observers and allies also stress that any incoming chief of staff is unlikely to fundamentally change a gut-driven president who bridles at efforts to control him.

“A chief of staff for Donald Trump is a factotum and will have virtually no influence,” said Tony Schwartz, who wrote the 1987 book “The Art of the Deal” with Trump. “Trump’s chief of staff is Trump and always will be.”

Asked if he’s aware of any past adviser throughout Trump’s business career who was able to wrangle him, Schwartz said simply, “No and not even close.”

Part of Ayers’ ascension inside the West Wing comes from his own savviness, political instincts, and his close relationship with the Trump family, but part comes from the fact that there are few other viable candidates, especially as Trump continues to pursue a major personnel shake-up before the holidays.

“I think he gets it by default,” said a third former White House official about Ayers. “There’s nobody that’s really a good fit.”

The former official said Ayers has a number of potential deficiencies, including little knowledge of policy – though that may not matter amid a divided government.

Inside the White House, Ayers has built his relationship with the president by frequently attending Trump’s weekly private lunches with the vice president, in which Ayers, Kelly, and Pence typically are the president’s only guests. He also forged his relationship with the Trump children during the hectic 2016 campaign, during which he acted as an outside adviser and consultant before becoming the vice president’s chief-of-staff in July 2017.

A few other names have popped up as potential candidates for chief-of-staff including Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin who also enjoys a close relationship with the Trump kids. Mnuchin, however, has told friends that he is content running the Treasury Department.

The outstanding question is whether any chief-of-staff can effectively work inside the Trump administration, in which the president prefers to always run the show.

Kelly did the best he could, said Leon Panetta, the former chief of staff to President Bill Clinton, but “a fundamental problem is that he is dealing with a president who resists any kind of discipline and that means as chief of staff you’re constantly in a reactive mode and having to do constant repair work.”
 
Doesn't this mean that if he is called before Congress or Mueller that he can't claim executive privilege?
My guess is that he could be called, but could still claim privilege over information related to the time he was in an official position. But I'm no legal expert.

At any rate, good riddance. Kelly was supposed to be the one to bring order and organization to Team Trump, but in the end all he ended up doing was helping to facilitate the crazy a little quieter. And he couldn't even manage that, either. But I say fuck it. Let's but a real sycophant in the slot. We got two years left. Let's just go full Trump and see how that pans out.
 
A Look Back At John Kelly’s Turbulent Time In The White House
The 68-year-old retired Marine general will be leaving his role as White House chief of staff after months of speculation.





John Kelly will leave his post as White House chief of staff by the end of the year, President Donald Trump told reporters Saturday. The announcement follows months of speculation that his tumultuous time in the Trump administration was drawing to a close.

Trump appointed Kelly, a retired four-star Marine general, in July 2017 to replace Reince Priebus, who resigned as chief of staff after just six months in office. Kelly, 68, had been serving as secretary of the Department of Homeland Security at the time.

Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle had applauded Kelly’s appointment as chief of staff, hoping his record of discipline could rein in the chaos that plagued the White House during Priebus’ tenure.

But Kelly’s reputation as a levelheaded straight shooter, earned over a decadeslong career in the military, began to erode within months of his installation, and his no-nonsense attitude did little to slow the revolving door of Trump administration officials.

Kelly reportedly offered to resign or threatened to quit his role several times before his departure.

Here’s a look back at the most memorable moments of his White House tenure:

October 2017: Bashes Rep. Frederica Wilson (D-Fla.)
Kelly came to Trump’s defense in October 2017 after Wilson slammed the president for telling the wife of a fallen soldier that her husband “must’ve known what he signed up for.”

Kelly, whose son died serving in Afghanistan, told reporters that his son’s commanding officer had said something similar.

“He knew what he was getting himself into,” Kelly said, quoting his son’s commanding officer. “It was exactly where he wanted to be. That was the message.”

He then attacked Wilson as “selfish” and falsely accused her of trying to take credit for securing federal funding for a new FBI building in Miramar, Florida, during its 2015 dedication ceremony.

In fact, Wilson drew bipartisan praise at the ceremony for pushing through legislation naming the buildings after two deceased FBI agents. Video of the event obtained by the Sun-Sentinel showed Wilson had taken credit for making sure the buildings were named after the agents ― not for securing funding.

Days later, Kelly told Fox News that he would “never” apologize to Wilson.

October 2017: Calls Robert E. Lee an “honorable man”
Kelly faced instant backlash after describing the Confederate general as an “honorable man” and blaming the Civil War on a failure to “compromise.” The primary catalyst for the war was slavery, according to most historians.

“I would tell you that Robert E. Lee was an honorable man,” Kelly had told Fox News. “He was a man that gave up his country to fight for his state, which 150 years ago was more important than country. It was always loyalty to state first back in those days. Now it’s different today.”

“The lack of an ability to compromise led to the Civil War, and men and women of good faith on both sides made their stand where their conscience had them make their stand,” he added.

January: Criticizes Trump’s border wall promise
Kelly told members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus that Trump wasn’t “fully informed” when he promised voters during his 2016 presidential campaign that he would build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border if elected.

“I can confirm that Chief of Staff Kelly said today that the President’s campaign was not fully informed about the wall he was promising to voters,” Rep. Luis Gutiérrez (D-Ill.), who was present for the meeting, said in a statement.

“Kelly went on to say that many campaigns are not fully informed about every policy and that campaigning and governing are two different things and that governing is harder,” Gutiérrez added.

Kelly’s comments reportedly infuriated Trump, who tweeted that he “has never changed or evolved from the first day I conceived of it.”

February: Calls some Dreamers “too lazy” to apply for DACA
Immigrant communities and their allies were incensed when Kelly claimed Trump’s proposed immigration policy was generous because it would help some undocumented immigrants who may have previously been “too lazy” to seek protections.

Trump had said he would support a path to citizenship for the 690,000 people protected under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA, as well as for anyone who is eligible for the program but didn’t sign up. The White House estimates that’s 1.8 million people total.

“The difference between 690 [thousand] and 1.8 million were the people that some would say were too afraid to sign up, others would say were too lazy to get off their asses, but they didn’t sign up,” Kelly said, according to The Washington Post.

He doubled down on his comments later in the day, telling reporters that people “just should have probably gotten off the couch and signed up.”



February: Defends Rob Porter amid domestic abuse allegations
Kelly reportedly offered his resignation to Trump after a series of missteps in handling domestic abuse allegations against then-White House staff secretary Rob Porter.

Multiple media outlets reported that Kelly knew about a protective order against Porter well before the aide resigned over allegations that he had abused his two ex-wives. On the day of Porter’s resignation, Kelly released a glowing statement about him, crafted in part by then-White House Communications Director Hope Hicks, who was romantically involved with Porter at the time.

“Rob Porter is a man of true integrity and honor and I can’t say enough good things about him,” Kelly wrote. “He is a friend, a confidante, and a trusted professional. I am proud to serve alongside him.”

March: Jokes that “God punished me” when he became Trump’s chief of staff
While speaking at an event marking the 15th anniversary of the Department of Homeland Security, Kelly told the crowd that he missed serving as the head of the agency before being appointed as White House chief of staff.

“The last thing I wanted to do was walk away from one of the great honors of my life, being the secretary of homeland security,” Kelly had said. “But I did something wrong and God punished me, I guess.”

The audience laughed, but, given speculation around Kelly’s potential departure, others wondered if there was an undercurrent of truth in his remarks.

June: Reportedly calls White House a “miserable place to work”
Kelly told a group of senators visiting the White House that it was a “miserable place to work,” reported The New York Times, which noted that the chief of staff had been questioning how much longer he could stay in the role.

August: Omarosa leaks audio of Kelly firing her
Former White House aide Omarosa Manigault Newman released a tape she secretly recorded of Kelly firing her last year in the executive mansion’s Situation Room.

Kelly can be heard telling Manigault Newman that he had become aware of some “pretty significant integrity issues,” alluding to a “pretty serious offense” that would, if she were a member of the military, spur a court-martial.

″We’re not suggesting any legal action here,” Kelly said. “But... it would be a pretty serious offense.” He added that he hoped her exit would be a “friendly departure.”

“And then you can go on without any type of difficulty in the future relative to your reputation,” he said.

Manigault Newman said she interpreted that as an “obvious threat.”



October: Accused of calling Elizabeth Warren an “impolite arrogant woman” in a past email
Kelly attacked Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) in a private email exchange with his top aide in February 2017, calling her an “impolite arrogant woman,” reported BuzzFeed.

“Absolutely most insulting conversation I have ever had with anyone,” Kelly, then serving as the secretary of homeland security, wrote of a telephone conversation with Warren in an email obtained by BuzzFeed.

“What an impolite arrogant woman,” he continued. “She immediately began insulting our people accusing them of not following the court order, insulting and abusive behavior towards those covered by the pause, blah blah blah.”

Warren later tweeted that she had been “tough” on Kelly but that “there’s nothing impolite about people’s right to speak out and hold their government accountable.”
 
"Stop him"?!?! This motherfcuker is a walking, talking, tweeting dumpster fire!! He's his own worst enemy!!
I think they mean enemies of nick Ayers not Trump.

Nick Ayers is Mike Pence's dude.

Some see this as a way for Pence to try and influence Trump.

This whole administration is about folk trying to get in trumps ear.
 
don't these niggas be on top of this shit though??

What be getting me is when i see shit on here before I see it on Twitter. Ain't nobody supposed to beat Twitter.
Real talk, the main reason I stay with this board is because news breaks here first. I've known people were dead before they were even reported as in the hospital. "The network" is crazy.
 
Naw bruh he went back and edited the post to add that link. When he originally posted it this shit was nowhere. I turned on CNN and MSNBC and they were talking about Cohen. 20 minutes later them niggas talking about breaking news .

Yeah. I came back and added the link after CNN added the story. I was actually sitting on it for a second because I didn't see it anywhere and thought it was fake news.
 
The chick in charge of Dept of Homeland Security will be getting the axe soon.

Trump has slammed her constantly cuz of the Mexican border and immigration and has talked smack on her at Cabinet meetings.
 
2 to 1 odds Conway is the next to flee with her hubby going at Trump

3 to 2 odds Steve " I liquidated financing 4 Relativity Media" Mnuchin bails if the markets continue spiral. He can grab 4 or 5 board seats & get the use of many G650's for his Goldman connect & government contacts.

Better than a Scorsese flick..

 
A Look Back At John Kelly’s Turbulent Time In The White House
The 68-year-old retired Marine general will be leaving his role as White House chief of staff after months of speculation.






John Kelly will leave his post as White House chief of staff by the end of the year, President Donald Trump told reporters Saturday. The announcement follows months of speculation that his tumultuous time in the Trump administration was drawing to a close.

Trump appointed Kelly, a retired four-star Marine general, in July 2017 to replace Reince Priebus, who resigned as chief of staff after just six months in office. Kelly, 68, had been serving as secretary of the Department of Homeland Security at the time.

Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle had applauded Kelly’s appointment as chief of staff, hoping his record of discipline could rein in the chaos that plagued the White House during Priebus’ tenure.

But Kelly’s reputation as a levelheaded straight shooter, earned over a decadeslong career in the military, began to erode within months of his installation, and his no-nonsense attitude did little to slow the revolving door of Trump administration officials.

Kelly reportedly offered to resign or threatened to quit his role several times before his departure.

Here’s a look back at the most memorable moments of his White House tenure:

October 2017: Bashes Rep. Frederica Wilson (D-Fla.)
Kelly came to Trump’s defense in October 2017 after Wilson slammed the president for telling the wife of a fallen soldier that her husband “must’ve known what he signed up for.”

Kelly, whose son died serving in Afghanistan, told reporters that his son’s commanding officer had said something similar.

“He knew what he was getting himself into,” Kelly said, quoting his son’s commanding officer. “It was exactly where he wanted to be. That was the message.”

He then attacked Wilson as “selfish” and falsely accused her of trying to take credit for securing federal funding for a new FBI building in Miramar, Florida, during its 2015 dedication ceremony.

In fact, Wilson drew bipartisan praise at the ceremony for pushing through legislation naming the buildings after two deceased FBI agents. Video of the event obtained by the Sun-Sentinel showed Wilson had taken credit for making sure the buildings were named after the agents ― not for securing funding.

Days later, Kelly told Fox News that he would “never” apologize to Wilson.

October 2017: Calls Robert E. Lee an “honorable man”
Kelly faced instant backlash after describing the Confederate general as an “honorable man” and blaming the Civil War on a failure to “compromise.” The primary catalyst for the war was slavery, according to most historians.

“I would tell you that Robert E. Lee was an honorable man,” Kelly had told Fox News. “He was a man that gave up his country to fight for his state, which 150 years ago was more important than country. It was always loyalty to state first back in those days. Now it’s different today.”

“The lack of an ability to compromise led to the Civil War, and men and women of good faith on both sides made their stand where their conscience had them make their stand,” he added.

January: Criticizes Trump’s border wall promise
Kelly told members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus that Trump wasn’t “fully informed” when he promised voters during his 2016 presidential campaign that he would build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border if elected.

“I can confirm that Chief of Staff Kelly said today that the President’s campaign was not fully informed about the wall he was promising to voters,” Rep. Luis Gutiérrez (D-Ill.), who was present for the meeting, said in a statement.

“Kelly went on to say that many campaigns are not fully informed about every policy and that campaigning and governing are two different things and that governing is harder,” Gutiérrez added.

Kelly’s comments reportedly infuriated Trump, who tweeted that he “has never changed or evolved from the first day I conceived of it.”

February: Calls some Dreamers “too lazy” to apply for DACA
Immigrant communities and their allies were incensed when Kelly claimed Trump’s proposed immigration policy was generous because it would help some undocumented immigrants who may have previously been “too lazy” to seek protections.

Trump had said he would support a path to citizenship for the 690,000 people protected under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA, as well as for anyone who is eligible for the program but didn’t sign up. The White House estimates that’s 1.8 million people total.

“The difference between 690 [thousand] and 1.8 million were the people that some would say were too afraid to sign up, others would say were too lazy to get off their asses, but they didn’t sign up,” Kelly said, according to The Washington Post.

He doubled down on his comments later in the day, telling reporters that people “just should have probably gotten off the couch and signed up.”



February: Defends Rob Porter amid domestic abuse allegations
Kelly reportedly offered his resignation to Trump after a series of missteps in handling domestic abuse allegations against then-White House staff secretary Rob Porter.

Multiple media outlets reported that Kelly knew about a protective order against Porter well before the aide resigned over allegations that he had abused his two ex-wives. On the day of Porter’s resignation, Kelly released a glowing statement about him, crafted in part by then-White House Communications Director Hope Hicks, who was romantically involved with Porter at the time.

“Rob Porter is a man of true integrity and honor and I can’t say enough good things about him,” Kelly wrote. “He is a friend, a confidante, and a trusted professional. I am proud to serve alongside him.”

March: Jokes that “God punished me” when he became Trump’s chief of staff
While speaking at an event marking the 15th anniversary of the Department of Homeland Security, Kelly told the crowd that he missed serving as the head of the agency before being appointed as White House chief of staff.

“The last thing I wanted to do was walk away from one of the great honors of my life, being the secretary of homeland security,” Kelly had said. “But I did something wrong and God punished me, I guess.”

The audience laughed, but, given speculation around Kelly’s potential departure, others wondered if there was an undercurrent of truth in his remarks.

June: Reportedly calls White House a “miserable place to work”
Kelly told a group of senators visiting the White House that it was a “miserable place to work,” reported The New York Times, which noted that the chief of staff had been questioning how much longer he could stay in the role.

August: Omarosa leaks audio of Kelly firing her
Former White House aide Omarosa Manigault Newman released a tape she secretly recorded of Kelly firing her last year in the executive mansion’s Situation Room.

Kelly can be heard telling Manigault Newman that he had become aware of some “pretty significant integrity issues,” alluding to a “pretty serious offense” that would, if she were a member of the military, spur a court-martial.

″We’re not suggesting any legal action here,” Kelly said. “But... it would be a pretty serious offense.” He added that he hoped her exit would be a “friendly departure.”

“And then you can go on without any type of difficulty in the future relative to your reputation,” he said.

Manigault Newman said she interpreted that as an “obvious threat.”



October: Accused of calling Elizabeth Warren an “impolite arrogant woman” in a past email
Kelly attacked Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) in a private email exchange with his top aide in February 2017, calling her an “impolite arrogant woman,” reported BuzzFeed.

“Absolutely most insulting conversation I have ever had with anyone,” Kelly, then serving as the secretary of homeland security, wrote of a telephone conversation with Warren in an email obtained by BuzzFeed.

“What an impolite arrogant woman,” he continued. “She immediately began insulting our people accusing them of not following the court order, insulting and abusive behavior towards those covered by the pause, blah blah blah.”

Warren later tweeted that she had been “tough” on Kelly but that “there’s nothing impolite about people’s right to speak out and hold their government accountable.”

yep

thanks for posting this. dude is a pos.

media romanticizing his tenure as one of being a stabilizing force and saving grace

fuck him
 
Back
Top