USA TODAY US Edition

Hope Hicks is chosen to replace Scaramucci

Adviser will be interim chief of communicat­ions

- Jessica Estepa

Two weeks after Anthony Scaramucci was booted from the Trump administra­tion, Hope Hicks is set to take over the reins of the White House communicat­ions shop until an official replacemen­t is named, the White House announced Wednesday.

“Hope Hicks will work with White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders and all of the communicat­ions team and serve as the interim White House communicat­ions director,” the White House said in a statement. “We will make an announceme­nt on a permanent communicat­ions director at the appropriat­e time.”

Here are five things to know about the 28-year-old woman who is considered one of Trump’s most valued advisers:

1. SHE HAS BEEN WITH THE PRESIDENT SINCE THE START.

Her associatio­n with the Trump family predates Donald Trump’s candidacy. According to GQ, Hicks first worked with Ivanka Trump when she was at a public relations firm. She joined the Trump Organizati­on in 2014, where she soon drew the attention of Donald Trump himself. Months later, when Trump was mulling his presidenti­al bid, he called Hicks into her office.

“Mr. Trump looked at me and said, ‘I’m thinking about running for president, and you’re going to be my press secretary,’ ” Hicks said, according to New York magazine. “I think it’s ‘the year of the outsider.’ It helps to have people with outsider perspectiv­e.”

2. COMMUNICAT­IONS RUNS IN HER BLOOD.

Her only political communicat­ions experience is with Trump’s campaign and administra­tion, but her family has worked in public relations for decades. Her father, Paul, ran communicat­ions for the NFL and now is managing director of the Glover Park Group in Washington. Both of her grandfathe­rs also worked in public relations, according to GQ. Additional­ly, her parents met while working on Capitol Hill, according to Town and Country magazine.

3. SHE WAS IN ‘STRATEGIC COMMUNICAT­IONS.’

While she worked as the Trump campaign’s press secretary, she transition­ed to a behind-thescenes role when Trump took office as his director of strategic communicat­ions. That has left her outside of any sort of organizati­onal chart. According to Politico, her role is more about “strategica­lly communicat­ing with the president” than working with the press. Unlike other advisers, she’s not an avid Twitter user, with only three retweets on her account. She has recently drawn attention for being the only administra­tion official present at the New York Times interview in which the president criticized Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

4. SHE’S ON PAR WITH OTHER TOP WHITE HOUSE OFFICIALS.

A financial report released by the White House revealed Hicks was one of the top-paid administra­tion officials. She makes $179,700 a year, the highest salary that can be paid to a White House employee, alongside other top advisers such as Steve Bannon and Kellyanne Conway.

5. TRUMP HAS HIGH HOPES FOR THE ‘HOPESTER.’

The president has a nickname for Hicks: the “Hopester,” according to Politico.

“I thought Hope was outstandin­g,” the president said during the 2016 campaign, according to GQ.

She’s also close to Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner, who have had her over for Shabbat dinner at their home in Washington.

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