USA TODAY International Edition

Kelly faces task of imposing discipline

Trump’s chief- of- staff pick enters an unruly White House culture

- Jim Michaels

Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly, President Trump’s choice to replace Reince Priebus as chief of staff, is a retired Marine general and combat leader who will now face the challenge of bringing order to a White House staff mired in chaos.

Kelly has the skills to impose needed discipline in the White House, say those who know him.

“Whether or not he will be successful depends on his relationsh­ip with the president, and it seems like that relationsh­ip is okay,” said Carl Fulford, a retired Marine Corps four- star general. “I don’t think he is going to put up with expletives coming from people who want to see their name in the paper.”

Kelly, 67, will need to straighten out a White House riven by public feuds and confused messaging, culminatin­g with an expletive- laden rant against Priebus by Anthony Scaramucci, the new White House communicat­ions director, that was posted online Thursday by the The New Yorker magazine.

Kelly retired from the Marine Corps after more than 40 years of service when Trump offered him the Homeland Security position.

Raised in a working- class family in Boston, Kelly first enlisted in the Marine Corps and later attended Officer Candidates School.

He served in a wide range of positions in the Marine Corps, including a stint in the service’s liaison office to the House of Representa­tives, where he spent time with lawmakers and was exposed to politics and the legislativ­e process.

“He knows how Congress works,” Fulford said.

As a four- star general, Kelly served as commander of Southern Command, traveling widely throughout South and Central America and making contacts among military leaders in the region.

Kelly is particular­ly close to Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and Marine Gen. Joe Dunford, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH, AP ?? President Trump talks with Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly at the U. S. Coast Guard Academy in May.
SUSAN WALSH, AP President Trump talks with Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly at the U. S. Coast Guard Academy in May.

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