The Record (Troy, NY)

Six steps to surviving a job in the Trump administra­tion

- Dana Milbank Columnist Follow DanaMilban­k on Twitter, @ Milbank.

So you are about to accept President Trump’s offer to be White House chief of staff. On behalf of a grateful nation, thank you. We were worried nobody would take the job.

You say you have no experience in government or politics. Not a problem! Nobody else in the White House knows how to run a country, either. And don’t be alarmed by those never-Trumpers who claim “Everything Trump Touches Dies.” That’s overstated. You will be ostracized, publicly humiliated and possibly imprisoned — but you won’t literally die. At least not if you take the following precaution­s to maximize your job satisfacti­on and personal happiness:

Find a therapist. Working for Trump is bruising to self-esteem. Former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen, in receiving his three-year prison sentence Wednesday, tearfully described his “personal and mental incarcerat­ion” in Trump’s employ. He surely felt the pain of going from being a “fine person” and a “great guy” in Trump’s eyes to a “weak person and not a very smart person.”

But with cognitive-behavior therapy, you may feel less hurt than those before you. Former secretary of state Rex Tillerson, who ran ExxonMobil, was reduced from being called a “world class player” by Trump and “one of the truly great business leaders” to being “dumb as a rock” and “lazy as hell.” Jeff Sessions, who surrendere­d a Senate seat to become attorney general, went from an “honest man” to “Mr. Magoo.” Stephen K. Bannon was “tough and smart” before “Sloppy Steve” “lost his mind.” Omarosa Manigault Newman, a “loyal friend,” turned into a “lowlife” “Wacky” “dog.”

Don’t quit your day job. Consider a leave of absence from your current job. Or maybe just call in sick. Anthony Scaramucci, one of several communicat­ion directors under Trump, lasted just 10 days. Even if you last longer, it won’t be by much. Kathryn Dunn Tenpas of the Brookings Institutio­n says turnover among the most senior White House staffers (that’s you!) is 83 percent. Andit happens suddenly: A deputy national security adviser was just ousted after the first lady’s office requested it — publicly.

Also, a former White House official complained to BuzzFeed , “no one is really hiring people with Trump White House experience.” Possibly that’s because so many depart under accusation­s of domestic abuse, white supremacy, drunkennes­s or, in the case of former Cabinet members Tom Price and David Shulkin, feasting at the taxpayer trough. Former EPA administra­tor Scott Pruitt is nowa ssociated primarily with Ritz-Carlton lotion, “tactical” pants and a soundproof phone booth.

Get married, or join a celibate religious order. Trump once boasted that avoiding sexually transmitte­d diseases was his own “personal Vietnam”; his aides now find that dating is their own personal Syria. People whowork for Trump cannot get dates. Politico reported that “Trump supporters swipe left” could be “the single most common disclaimer on dating app profiles in Washington.” Loveless young Trump aides have “quietly settled on the margins” of D.C., in newly built neighborho­ods where people don’t (yet) know each other and outcasts can enjoy anonymity.

Open Uber Eats and Instacart accounts (under a pseudonym). Take sensible precaution­s to minimize the inevitable shunning that comes with the job. Embattled Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, right after defending Trump’s soon-to-beabandone­d family-separation policy, unwisely dined at a Mexican restaurant — where she was heckled.

As Sarah Sanders found, even Virginia is unsafe for Trump people. And the chuckling (if not the heckling) will follow you after the job, as Washington paragons-cum-punchlines Reince Priebus and Sean Spicer know. You should feel free to blame George Soros if anybody is rude to you in public. But better to lie low, as Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin does: Booed at UCLA, he canceled an appearance at his alma mater, Yale.

Get a lawyer. Very important! Do not wait until you’ve broken the law. Five former advisers to Trump— Co- hen, Michael Flynn, Paul Manafort, Rick Gates and George Papadopoul­os — have already accepted guilty pleas or been convicted, and several more — Roger Stone, Donald Trump Jr., Jared Kushner — could be in jeopardy, too. With so many scandals enveloping so many in Trump’s orbit, the best criminal-defense lawyers are already spoken for. (Pro tip: John Dowd, Ty Cobb and Donald McGahn, all recently departed from Trump’s legal service in less-than-glorious circumstan­ces, may have time.)

Above all: Have fun! There are great names in the graveyard of former Trump officials. John F. Kelly, H.R. McMaster and Flynn were much-decorated generals before their humiliatio­ns, and Gary Cohn was a Wall Street titan before his. But you, Trump’s third chief of staff in two years, are not burdened by good reputation, so there’s little to lose. Worst case, you wind up in jail, which isn’t so bad. You wouldn’t be able to get a date anyway.

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