The Phnom Penh Post

‘US’ chief of staff John Kelly leaving at year’s end’

-

US PRESIDENT Donald Trump on Saturday announced his chief of staff John Kelly will soon be leaving the administra­tion, the latest key personnel move at a time of mounting pressure from the Russia election-meddling probe that comes amid increased focus on preparing for the 2020 elections.

Kelly, a retired Marine Corps general, was long rumoured to be on the way out, amid reports that his relationsh­ip with the volatile Trump had deteriorat­ed to such an extent they were no longer on speaking terms.

Some Democrats suggested that Trump timed the announceme­nt to distract from troubling legal filings on Friday from the special counsel inves- tigating Russian meddling.

Prosecutor­s said Trump had directed his lawyer Michael Cohen to make illegal payments to two women to silence allegation­s of sexual affairs. ffairs.

The Kelly news reportedly was originally scheduled for Monday before efore the president made e the impromptu announcenc­ement, speaking to reporters on the White House lawn.

“John Kelly will l be leaving at the end of f the year,” Trump said. “I appreciate his service e very much.”

He said a replacemen­t ment – possibly an interim terim appointmen­t – would be named “over the next day or two.”

Nick Ayers, the 36-year-old chief of staff to Vice President Mike Pence, is widely touted to be Trump’s Tr favourite to succeed Kelly.

F For all his youth, A Ayers is said to have t the political savvy – crucial as Trump plots a path to the 2020 election – that Kelly, a retired Marine C Corps general, la lacked.

When Kelly, 68, w was tabbed in July l last year to replace chief of staff Reince Priebus, he inher- ited a White House plagued by political intrigue and internal disorder, and under a cloud because of the allegation­s of collusion with Russia.

Kelly is credited with bringing some discipline to the Oval Office.

When he took up his post, for example, the president’s son-in-law Jared Kushner was reportedly holding regular informal conversati­ons with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman – Kelly insisted on returning to past practice requiring a member of the National Security Council to take part in all calls with foreign leaders.

But Kelly’s tenure was hardly smooth sailing. His comments about the Civil War and immigratio­n drew liberals’ wrath.

Democratic Congresswo­man Maxine Waters tweeted on Friday that Kelly was “one of a long list of failed & incompeten­t Trump appointees that served in a dysfunctio­nal White House.”

The job of White House chief of staff is one of the most vital and difficult – and can be one of the most thankless – in any administra­tion.

Kelly once suggested that being named to the position was something of a curse, joking that “God punished me, I guess.”

Trump was said not to have appreciate­d Kelly’s humour.

The Republican president, who once said he wanted Kelly to stay through 2020, had hinted for weeks that he was no longer enamoured with his aide.

“There are certain things I love what he does and certain things I don’t like that he does,” he said in mid-November, adding: “At some point he’s going to want to move on.”

The impending departure leaves Trump reliant on a reduced group of key advisers even as he prepares to deal in the new year with a Democratic-controlled House of Representa­tives.

The opposition party will have the power to launch investigat­ions, issue subpoenas, and generally make his life more difficult.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia