The Mercury News

Kelly: He told Trump ‘Yes Man’ as his successor would lead to impeachmen­t

He believes if he had stayed at the White House, President Trump ‘would not be kind of, all over the place.’

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John Kelly, the former White House chief of staff who during his tenure made it clear he detested the job, expressed regret Saturday about leaving and implied that he could have helped stave off the impeachmen­t inquiry now threatenin­g Trump’s presidency.

Kelly, who left barely on speaking terms with the president, said he warned his boss to pick a successor in his mold, meaning someone who would push back against him. “I said, whatever you do, don’t hire a ‘yes man,’ someone who won’t tell you the truth — don’t do that,” Kelly said, according to The Washington

Examiner, which covered his remarks at a political summit it hosted in Sea Island, Georgia. “Because if you do, I believe you will be impeached.”

Trump released a statement Saturday denying Kelly’s comments.

Kelly left the administra­tion last December and has since joined the board of Caliburn Internatio­nal, the umbrella organizati­on of a company that runs the largest housing facility for migrant children. Kelly has spoken out about his time in the administra­tion on only a handful of occasions since his departure. On Saturday, he did not mention his successor, Mick Mulvaney, by name. But his comments appeared to pin the blame for the impeachmen­t inquiry on Trump’s embattled acting chief of staff, who said at a news conference last week that aid to Ukraine had been withheld because the president wanted to pressure the country to investigat­e his political rivals, only to later backpedal. Kelly framed Trump himself as a careening leader who needed to be controlled by his aides.

“I have an awful lot of, to say the least, second thoughts about leaving,” Kelly said. “It pains me to see what’s going on, because I believe if I was still there or someone like me was there, he would not be kind of, all over the place.”

During his early days as chief of staff, Kelly, a retired four-star general, was credited for bringing order to a chaotic West Wing. But by the end, he found the task of managing Trump to be impossible.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Former White House chief of staff John Kelly, right, admitted Saturday he has second thoughts about leaving his job, stating: “It pains me to see what’s going on.”
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Former White House chief of staff John Kelly, right, admitted Saturday he has second thoughts about leaving his job, stating: “It pains me to see what’s going on.”

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