Houston Chronicle

Kelly to stay with Trump through first term

President recently weighed replacing his chief of staff

- By Philip Rucker

WASHINGTON — John Kelly plans to remain as White House chief of staff through President Donald Trump’s 2020 re-election campaign, a White House official confirmed Tuesday, quieting speculatio­n that Kelly was nearing the exits because of tensions with the president.

Kelly, who on Monday celebrated his first anniversar­y as chief of staff, told West Wing staff Monday that he will be staying in his post at Trump’s request through the remainder of the president’s first term.

Kelly, a retired four-star Marine Corps general, has had a rocky tenure in the West Wing and was widely expected to leave his job this summer. But his announceme­nt, which was first reported by the Wall Street Journal and confirmed to the Washington Post by a White House official, ends for now what had become rampant chatter in Washington about Kelly’s departure and who might replace him.

Trump had openly weighed replacing Kelly in recent months, consulting friends and advisers about Kelly’s performanc­e and soliciting feedback on potential successors — including Mick Mulvaney, a former congressma­n who heads the Office of Management and Budget and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and Nick Ayers, a Republican strategist who serves as chief of staff to Vice President Mike Pence.

Mulvaney had been pitching himself for the job — even to the president — arguing that he had run two important agencies, would not try to manage the president and could be trusted not to leak informatio­n to journalist­s, according to people familiar with the conversati­ons.

But Trump has decided to stick with Kelly — for now, at least. As with all personnel matters in the Trump White House, circumstan­ces could change, and Kelly may not end up staying in his job through the 2020 election, considerin­g he serves at the pleasure of a president who often acts on impulse and whim.

Kelly was appointed last July to succeed Reince Priebus, Trump’s first chief of staff, after serving for the first six months of the administra­tion as secretary of homeland security.

Kelly sought to bring rigid order and discipline to the West Wing, but Trump chafed under his restrictio­ns, and Kelly found it impossible to contain the chaos that often is created by this president.

Trump and Kelly have privately argued at times and complained about one another to confidants. But their relationsh­ip appeared to have stabilized somewhat in recent months as the president felt more empowered to call his own shots, and the chief of staff loosened some of his restraints.

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