The Record (Troy, NY)

Scramble is on to find new White House chief of staff

Trump is deciding between four potential candidates

- By Zeke Miller, Jill Colvin and Jonathan Lemire Associated Press

WASHINGTON >> Wanted: Top aide to most powerful leader in world. Chief qualificat­ion: Willing to take the job. Must also be prepared to tolerate regular underminin­g by boss and risk of steep legal bills. Post-employment prospects: Uncertain.

President Donald Trump is scram- bling to find a new chief of staff after his first choice to replace John Kelly bailed at the last minute and several other potential successors signaled they weren’t interested in the job.

Back to square one, Trump is mulling over a list of at least four potential candidates after Nick Ayers, Vice President Mike Pence’s chief of staff, took himself out of the running Sunday and decided that he would instead be leaving the White House. The announceme­nt surprised even senior staffers who believed that Ayers’ ascension was a done deal.

Trump is nowsolicit­ing input on a list

of candidates that is said to include Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney, Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., the chairman of the conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus, and former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie. And allies are pitching Trump on even more contenders.

But as quickly as names were being floated, candidates appeared to be pulling themselves from considerat­ion, underscori­ng the challenges of working for a mercurial president who has acknowledg­ed that he likes to surround himself with chaos and despises any suggestion he’s being managed.

“In the best of times, it is relentless,” said Chris Whipple, an expert on chiefs of staff and author of “The Gatekeeper­s,” a book on the subject. “It’s 24/7. It’s thankless. You get all of the blame and none of the credit for everything that happens. And that’s in the best of times. We are not in the best of times.”

Trump’s administra­tion

has set records for staff turnover, and the president has often struggled to attract experience­d political profession­als, a challenge that has grown more difficult with the upcoming threat of costly Democratic oversight investigat­ions and an uncertain political environmen­t.

Those who take high-level positions in the WhiteHouse at this time open themselves up to potential legal exposure and pricey lawyer bills, said David B. Cohen, a political science professor at The University of Akron who cowrote a book on chiefs of staff.

After reports surfaced Monday that he was unwilling to take the job, Meadows told Politico Playbook: “Serving as Chief of Staff would be an incredible honor. The President has a long list of qualified candidates and I know he’ll make the best selection for his administra­tion and for the country.”

Meanwhile, U. S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer, a potential contender, said hewas “entirely focused” on his current position. Aperson familiar with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin’s thinking but not authorized

to speak publicly made clear he, too, is happy in his current post.

While some of the reactions may be strategic posturing, there is also ample reason for any aspiring chief of staff to give pause to the notion of taking the job.

Trumphas already burned through two chiefs of staff — a former chairman of the Republican National Committee and a retired Marine four-star general — subjecting them to regular humiliatio­n and ridicule.

Former RNC Chairman Reince Priebus’s departure from the White House was unceremoni­ously announced by tweet. Nearly 18 months later, Trump stepped on an orderly succession plan for Kelly, making a surprise Saturday announceme­nt on the White House lawn that the retired general would be leaving by year’s end.

Ayers’ ascension and Kelly’s departure looked like a done deal Friday night, according to multiple people in and close to the administra­tion, with an announceme­nt planned for Monday. Trump and Ayers had discussed the job for months, and the president had already been steer-

ing inquiries to the Pence staffer rather than Kelly. These people, like others, spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive personnel matters.

But Trump jumped the gun Saturday, and Ayers re- evaluated his decision. While a White House official said Ayers’ decision was driven by a desire to return to Georgia to be closer to his family, people familiar with his thinking said he was also worried about scrutiny of his former political consulting business. He and Trump also could not reach agreement on Ayers’ length of service. Ayers wanted to serve on an interim basis; Trump wanted a two-year commitment.

Trumpwasst­ungbyAyers’ decision to back out, according to people close to him. The embarrassm­ent comes at a pivotal time for Trump, as he prepares for re-election while facing an expected onslaught of investigat­ions from Democratsw­howill take control of the House and amid the ongoing Russia probe.

When Trump appoints a replacemen­t for Kelly, he will set a record for most chiefs of staff within the first 24 months of an administra­tion, according to an analysis by Kathryn Dunn Tenpas of the Brookings Institutio­n.

Yet Trump once mocked his predecesso­r for chief of staff turnover.

“3 Chief of Staffs in less than 3 years of being President: Part of the reason why @BarackObam­a can’t manage to pass his agenda,” Trumpwrote­ina2012twe­et.

Trump had said Saturday that he would be announcing Kelly’s replacemen­t in the next day or two. But with Ayers no longer waiting in the wings, there is fear that Trump may not have someone in place in time for Kelly’s departure or that he will pick the first person who comes to mind as he tries to counter perception­s that no one wants the position.

Two Republican­s close to the White House said Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, and his daughter Ivanka Trump, who were among Ayers’ top backers, were still trying to have an outsized hand in the restarted process, telling the president that the two of them, as family, would be the only ones Trump could count on to stay the course in the coming months. The Republican­s spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to speak publicly about private conversati­ons.

Trump has also told confidants that he is eager to bring on someone he gets along with as his third chief of staff. While he still had a measure of respect for Kelly, the men’s personal relationsh­ip had long been frosty. This time, Trump has told allies, he wants someone he can chat with — trading gossip and complainin­g about media coverage — as well as someone more attuned politicall­y.

Meanwhile, the list of names floated for the job continued to grow, including mentions by people close to the administra­tion of formerTrum­p deputy campaign manager David Bossie, acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker — even White House communicat­ions director Bill Shine and press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders. Many of them weren’t being taken seriously, but the breadth of the list highlighte­d the uncertaint­y in Trump’s political orbit over the job hunt.

 ?? JABIN BOTSFORD/ THE WASHINGTON POST VIA AP, POOL, FILE ?? Nick Ayers, right, listens as Supreme Court Associate Justice Neil Gorsuch waits for the arrival of the casket for former President George H.W. Bush to lie in state at the Capitol on Capitol Hill in Washington on Dec. 3. President Donald Trump’s top pick to replace John Kelly as chief of staff, Nick Ayers, is no longer expected to fill that role, according to a White House official.
JABIN BOTSFORD/ THE WASHINGTON POST VIA AP, POOL, FILE Nick Ayers, right, listens as Supreme Court Associate Justice Neil Gorsuch waits for the arrival of the casket for former President George H.W. Bush to lie in state at the Capitol on Capitol Hill in Washington on Dec. 3. President Donald Trump’s top pick to replace John Kelly as chief of staff, Nick Ayers, is no longer expected to fill that role, according to a White House official.

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