Las Vegas Review-Journal

These aides to Trump resigned after rioting

- The New York Times Company

Several Trump administra­tion officials have announced that they are resigning after a mob of Trump supporters stormed the Capitol on Wednesday, temporaril­y disrupting Congress as it was certifying Joe Biden’s Electoral College victory.

The officials included those in prominent positions in the White House, and staff members who have been working in the Trump administra­tion since the beginning of the president’s term in 2017. Some of the resignatio­ns came hours after President Donald Trump openly encouraged his supporters to go to the Capitol to protest what he has falsely claimed was a stolen election. The moves are being made with less than two weeks remaining in Trump’s term.

Here is a list of the administra­tion officials who have resigned.

Elaine Chao

Chao, the transporta­tion secretary, announced her resignatio­n on Twitter on Thursday, becoming the first Cabinet member to do so. The unrest at the Capitol, she wrote, “deeply troubled me in a way that I simply cannot set aside.” Chao is the wife of Senate Republican Leader Mitch Mcconnell of Kentucky.

Mick Mulvaney

Mulvaney, Trump’s former acting chief of staff, resigned as special envoy to Northern Ireland Wednesday night, saying he “can’t stay” after watching the president encourage the mob that overtook the Capitol.

In an interview with CNBC on Thursday morning, Mulvaney said he called Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Wednesday night and told him: “I can’t do it. I can’t stay.”

On Wednesday afternoon, Mulvaney, who was named acting chief of staff in 2018, wrote on Twitter: “The President’s tweet is not enough. He can stop this now and needs to do exactly that. Tell these folks to go home.”

Matthew Pottinger

Pottinger has been Trump’s deputy national security adviser since 2019. He was formerly the administra­tion’s Asia director on the National Security Council and was known for his on-theground experience in China, where he advised Trump during his meeting with President Xi Jinping in 2017. Pottinger has resigned, a person familiar with the events said Thursday.

John Costello

Costello, one of the country’s most senior cybersecur­ity officials, resigned Wednesday, telling associates that the violence on Capitol Hill was his “breaking point” and, he hoped, “a wake-up call.”

Tyler Goodspeed

Goodspeed, the acting chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, resigned Thursday, citing Trump’s incitement of the mob that stormed the Capitol.

“The events of yesterday made my position no longer tenable,” he said in an interview, after informing the White House chief of staff, Mark Meadows, of his decision.

Stephanie Grisham

Grisham, the former White House press secretary who served as chief of staff to Melania Trump, the first lady, submitted her resignatio­n Wednesday after the violence at the Capitol. She had worked for the Trumps since the 2016 campaign and was one of their longest-serving aides.

Rickie Niceta

Melania Trump chose Niceta, a former Washington event planner who helped coordinate Donald Trump’s inaugural celebratio­ns, as her social secretary in 2017. Niceta has said she was resigning, according to an administra­tion official familiar with her plans who was not authorized to speak publicly.

Sarah Matthews

Matthews, a deputy White House press secretary, submitted her resignatio­n Wednesday, saying in a statement that she was “deeply disturbed by what I saw today.”

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