Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

President Donald Trump said chief of staff John Kelly will leave at the end of the year.

Reshufflin­g reflects shift into campaign mode for 2020

- By Zeke Miller and Jill Colvin

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump said Saturday that chief of staff John Kelly will leave his job by year’s end amid an expected West Wing reshufflin­g reflecting a focus on the 2020 re-election campaign. Nick Ayers, Vice President Mike Pence’s chief of staff, is Trump’s top choice to replace Kelly, and the two have held discussion­s for months about the job, a White House official said. An announceme­nt was expected in the coming days, the president told reporters as he left the White House for the Army-Navy football game in Philadelph­ia. Kelly had been credited with imposing order on the West Wing after his arrival in June 2017 from his post as homeland security secretary. But his iron first alienated some Trump allies. Known through the West Wing as “the chief ” or “the general,” the retired Marine Corps four-star general was tapped by Trump via tweet in July 2017 from his perch atop the Homeland Security Department. “John Kelly will leaving — I don’t know if I can say retiring — but he’s a great guy,” Trump said. “John Kelly will be leaving at the end of the year. We’ll be announcing who will be taking John’s place — it might be on an interim basis. I’ll be announcing that over the next day or two, but John will be leaving at the end of the year. … I appreciate his service very much.” Lauding Kelly, House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., said the country was “better for his duty at the White House.” He called Kelly “a force for order, clarity and good sense.” Trump and Ayers, 36, were working out terms under which Ayers would fill the role and the time commitment he would make, the White House official said. Trump wants his next chief of staff to agree to hold the job through the 2020 election. Ayers, who is the father of triplets, had long planned to leave the administra­tion at the end of the year, but he has agreed to serve in an interim basis through the spring of 2019. White House aides say Trump has developed confidence in Ayers, in part by watching the effectiven­ess of Pence’s largely independen­t political operation.

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