Kelly a plain-spoken disciplinarian for Trump
John Kelly was not the sort of Marine general who dreamed of working in Washington. He likely never expected he would work in the White House.
In choosing Kelly to be his new chief of staff, President Donald Trump has turned to someone who in many ways is the opposite of his predecessor Reince Priebus, a seasoned political operator.
Kelly, like the president he serves, has limited experience in politics and only passing familiarity with many of the big domestic issues that will cross Trump’s desk. Instead of a deft political sense, he will bring some plain-spoken discipline to an often chaotic West Wing.
The 67-year-old Kelly, who is relatively close in age to Trump, has bonded quickly with a president who has often seemed overwhelmed and isolated in Washington.
“Sometimes you feel alone and besieged,” said a Kelly confidante who also knows the president. In Kelly, Trump’s Homeland Security secretary, the president has picked both an enforcer for the West Wing and someone who can be a friend.
In his 40 years in the military, Kelly developed a reputation for bluntness that won him the respect of his fellow Marines and sometimes grated on senior officials in the Obama administration. He is best known in Washington as an experienced battlefield commander who led U.S. troops in Iraq and lost a son in Afghanistan in 2010 to a Taliban bomb.
But the most relevant experience he will bring to the chief of staff job is a tour as senior military adviser to defense secretaries Robert Gates and Leon Panetta in the Pentagon. The job demanded Kelly act as a disciplinarian, pressing to make sure the military service chiefs and the sprawling Pentagon bureaucracy were executing the defense secretary’s agenda.
He also acted as a gatekeeper, deciding which of the military service’s top brass would get time with the defense secretary each day.
The president “clearly needed some adults in the room,” said Kelly’s longtime friend, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to offer frank opinions. “It’s the end of the end of the chaos. Not with John Kelly around.”