Los Angeles Times

Kellyanne Conway to leave White House

Top aide who helped steer Trump’s 2016 bid will exit this month.

- Associated press

WASHINGTON — Kellyanne Conway, one of President Trump’s most influentia­l and longest-serving advisors, announced Sunday that she would be leaving the White House at the end of the month.

Conway, Trump’s campaign manager during the stretch run of the 2016 race, was the first woman to successful­ly steer a White House bid, then became a senior counselor to the president. She informed Trump of her decision in the Oval Office.

Conway cited a need to spend time with her four children in a resignatio­n letter she posted Sunday night. Her husband, George Conway, had become an outspoken Trump critic and her family a subject of Washington’s rumor mill.

“We disagree about plenty but we are united on what matters most: the kids,” she wrote. “For now, and for my beloved children, it will be less drama, more mama.”

She is still slated to speak at the Republican National Convention this week. Her husband, an attorney who renounced Trump after the 2016 campaign, had become a member of the Lincoln Project, an outside group of Republican­s devoted to defeating Trump.

The politicall­y adversaria­l marriage generated much speculatio­n in the Beltway and online. George Conway also announced Sunday that he was taking a leave of absence from both Twitter and the Lincoln Project.

Kellyanne Conway worked for years as a Republican pollster and operative, and originally supported Texas Sen. Ted Cruz in the 2016 Republican primary. She moved over to the Trump campaign and that

August became campaign manager as Stephen K. Bannon became campaign chairman; Bannon was indicted Thursday on fraud charges.

Conway cited a need to help her children’s remote learning during the COVID-19 pandemic as a need to step away from her position. She had remained a trusted voice within the West Wing and spearheade­d several initiative­s, including combating opioid abuse.

She was also known for her robust defense of the president in media appearance­s, at times delivering dizzying rebuttals while once extolling the virtues of “alternativ­e facts” to support her case. Conway was also an informal advisor to the president’s reelection effort but resisted moving over to the campaign.

Her departure comes at an inopportun­e time for Trump, who faces a deficit in the polls as the Republican National Convention begins Monday. Her exit was first reported by the Washington Post.

 ?? Andrew Harnik Associated Press ?? KELLYANNE CONWAY, the first woman to successful­ly steer a White House campaign, is President Trump’s most influentia­l and longest-serving advisor.
Andrew Harnik Associated Press KELLYANNE CONWAY, the first woman to successful­ly steer a White House campaign, is President Trump’s most influentia­l and longest-serving advisor.

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