Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

History in firings

Administra­tion shattered record in just one term

- By Debra J. Saunders Review-Journal White House Correspond­ent

Churn in Trump administra­tion set record in staff turnover

WASHINGTON — Kathryn Dunn Tenpas had carved out an important but unsexy academic specialty for herself when she began to study hiring practices, with a focus on turnover rates, in White Houses from President Ronald Reagan onward.

“It was a sleepy little subfield,” she recalled from her home in Maryland.

Then came President Donald Trump, whose surprise victory in 2016 turned the Brookings Institutio­n nonresiden­t senior fellow into a go-to source for reporters looking to put Trump’s record-breaking staff turnover in context.

The 45th president, who became famous for telling reality-show participan­ts, “You’re fired,” on “The Apprentice,” has lorded over record churn among top aides and Cabinet members.

In his only term, Trump has burned through four chiefs of staff — Reince Priebus, John Kelly, Mick Mulvaney and Mark Meadows — as well as four national security advisers and four press secretarie­s. The comings and goings have been so prolific that Tenpas developed a name for the phenomenon: “serial turnover.”

The jobs with the highest turnover were deputy national security adviser and director of communicat­ions. Six individual­s served in each slot.

If Trump names someone to replace communicat­ions director Alyssa Farah, who left the White House in early December, there will have been seven people in that job.

“No matter how you slice the data, the turn-out is off the charts,” Tenpas said.

Losing the A-team

By the end of Trump’s freshman year in office, 35 percent of his A-team were no longer on the job. That’s more than double Reagan’s first-year turnover, which had been the highest before Trump.

“Just 32 months into the Trump administra­tion, the rate of turnover had exceeded his five predecesso­rs’ full first terms,” Tenpas wrote on the Brookings blog.

The White House cited Trump’s style as a reason for the figures.

“The high turnover is due to the president’s work ethic and how hard he works. And he’s relentless, and it’s hard for his staff to keep up with him,” assistant press secretary Karoline Leavitt told the Review-Journal. “I’m 23 years old, and it’s hard for me to keep up with him.”

Trump not only fired or forced a record number of Cabinet members and top staffers to resign — Tenpas came up with a new term, RUP, for “resigned under pressure” — but also has often announced his decision with “the added dimension of public humiliatio­n on Twitter.”

On Nov. 9, when Trump fired Defense Secretary Mark Esper, he wrote on Twitter, “Mark Esper has been terminated. I would like to thank him for his service.” Then Trump named an acting replacemen­t.

Before the month was over, Trump also fired Chris Krebs, director of the Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency, on Twitter. Krebs had released a statement that contradict­ed Trump’s assertions of election fraud by calling the Nov. 3 election “the most secure in American history.”

Tenpas also examined Trump White House staffers who were “survivors,” and put them under three headings. “Trusted confidants” include daughter Ivanka Trump and her husband Jared Kushner, who worked as unpaid aides, and uber-loyalists such as Stephen Miller, Dan Scavino and the since-departed Kellyanne Conway who had relations with Trump before his 2016 victory.

The second group, economic and trade policy wonks, consists of U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer, trade policy handler Peter Navarro and Richard Burkhauser, who serves on the Council of Economic Advisers.

The third group, “outside the public eye,” is now down to one person, Lisa Curtis, a member of the National Security Council and senior director for South and Central Asia.

Some survivors

Tenpas has a theory about Cabinet members such as Housing and Urban Developmen­t Secretary Ben Carson and Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, who were Trump’s first picks and lasted on the job until this week when DeVos resigned.

“I think there were a lot of issues that Trump didn’t care about,” Tenpas said, and those individual­s were more likely to endure. “If you were a Cabinet secretary on an issue that he cared about, then it was harder to survive.”

A key policy area for Trump is immigratio­n, and he has burned through a number of Department of Homeland Security chiefs. He promoted his first secretary, John Kelly, to chief of staff. After Kelly’s successor, Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, resigned under pressure in April 2019, Trump named two acting secretarie­s, Kevin McAleenan and Chad Wolf, neither of whom was confirmed.

The administra­tion’s musical chairs in Homeland Security led to the use of “legal gymnastics” necessary to appoint replacemen­ts in keeping with department rules. Those maneuvers put leadership in legal jeopardy and created vacancies in department ranks. As the Partnershi­p for Public Service reported in August, only 35 percent of Senate-confirmed positions had permanent leaders with the Department of Homeland Security.

Learning curve, burnout

Before Trump, her study informed Tenpas about the rhythm of new administra­tion hires. Officials often would tell her that it took them half a year to master the job, and after another six to nine months, many were burned out. Generally, a new administra­tion’s staff starts to leave after two years.

The first batch of a president’s hires, Tenpas noted, tends to include individual­s who have a history with a new president.

“The second string comes along midway through the first term,” Tenpas said, and they don’t have the same stuff.

With Trump, turnover was on steroids, and new elements to the old churn developed. Tenpas never before saw staffers who left a White House in less-than-ideal circumstan­ces later return to the same administra­tion. But then Communicat­ions Director Hope Hicks, who resigned in 2018 after she admitted to a House committee that on occasion she told “white lies,” returned to 1600 Pennsylvan­ia Ave. in February.

Johnny McEntee, who like Hicks worked for the Trump organizati­on before Trump ran for president, left the White House under a cloud when then-chief of staff Kelly learned that the onetime bodyman had a gambling problem. In February, McEntee returned as director of the Presidenti­al Personnel Office, whence he has been involved in the purge of staffers seen as insufficie­ntly loyal.

On Dec. 1, Trump’s second attorney general, William Barr, told the Associated Press that “to date, we have not seen fraud on a scale that could have effected a different outcome in the election.”

As Trump continued to blame voter fraud for his election loss, he turned his ire on Barr on Twitter, causing some to wonder whether the president would dispense with Barr with the same hostility he had exhibited when he fired his first attorney general, Jeff Sessions.

On Dec. 14, Barr put an end to the speculatio­n when he presented Trump with a letter of resignatio­n.

This time, Trump posted a fond farewell on Twitter.

“Just had a very nice meeting with Attorney General Bill Barr at the White House. Our relationsh­ip has been a very good one, he has done an outstandin­g job!” the president announced. “As per letter, Bill will be leaving just before Christmas to spend the holidays with his family.”

Tenpas, now also a senior fellow at the University of Virginia’s Miller Center, tweeted that the outgoing president had burned through two Cabinet secretarie­s in three department­s, “another historic first. #instabilit­y.”

 ?? Evan Vucci The Associated Press ?? President Donald Trump turned his ire on Attorney General William Barr as he blamed voter fraud for his election loss, similar to the hostility exhibited toward fired first Attorney General Jeff Sessions. Barr resigned Dec. 14.
Evan Vucci The Associated Press President Donald Trump turned his ire on Attorney General William Barr as he blamed voter fraud for his election loss, similar to the hostility exhibited toward fired first Attorney General Jeff Sessions. Barr resigned Dec. 14.
 ?? Alex Brandon The Associated Press ?? On Nov. 9, when Trump fired Defense Secretary Mark Esper, he wrote on Twitter, “Mark Esper has been terminated. I would like to thank him for his service.” Trump made several firing announceme­nts on the platform.
Alex Brandon The Associated Press On Nov. 9, when Trump fired Defense Secretary Mark Esper, he wrote on Twitter, “Mark Esper has been terminated. I would like to thank him for his service.” Trump made several firing announceme­nts on the platform.
 ?? The Associated Press ?? Alex Brandon
If Trump names someone to replace communicat­ions director Alyssa Farah, who left in early December, there will have been seven people in that job.
The Associated Press Alex Brandon If Trump names someone to replace communicat­ions director Alyssa Farah, who left in early December, there will have been seven people in that job.
 ?? Evan Vucci The Associated Press ?? Hope Hicks, left, and Johnny McEntee, right, are among staffers who left the White House in less-than-ideal circumstan­ces and later returned to the administra­tion. Hicks resigned as communicat­ions director in 2018 after admitting to a House committee that she told “white lies.” Former bodyman McEntee left after it came out that he had a gambling problem. Both returned to different roles in February.
Evan Vucci The Associated Press Hope Hicks, left, and Johnny McEntee, right, are among staffers who left the White House in less-than-ideal circumstan­ces and later returned to the administra­tion. Hicks resigned as communicat­ions director in 2018 after admitting to a House committee that she told “white lies.” Former bodyman McEntee left after it came out that he had a gambling problem. Both returned to different roles in February.
 ?? Patrick Semansky The Associated Press ?? Researcher Kathyrn Dunn Tempas considers White House senior advisers Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump, the daughter of President Trump, trusted confidants, which has allowed them to become rare “survivors” of the Trump administra­tion.
Patrick Semansky The Associated Press Researcher Kathyrn Dunn Tempas considers White House senior advisers Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump, the daughter of President Trump, trusted confidants, which has allowed them to become rare “survivors” of the Trump administra­tion.

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