Texarkana Gazette

Latina press officer Ferre leaves White House

- By Luis Alonso Lugo

WASHINGTON—Helen Aguirre Ferre, one of the most prominent Latinos serving in the White House, has left her job as director of media affairs.

White House spokeswoma­n Lindsay Walters said Thursday that Aguirre was taking up a new position as director for strategic communicat­ions and public affairs at the National Endowment for the Arts. She said Aguirre would start her new job in the next two weeks.

In a statement, Aguirre said she looks forward to “continuing to advance the President’s agenda in support of American communitie­s through the National Endowment for the Arts which provides support to nonprofit cultural institutio­ns nationwide.”

Aguirre had held the White House job since the start of the Trump administra­tion after serving as the Republican National Committee’s director of Hispanic communicat­ions. During her tenure, the White House removed the Spanishlan­guage content from its website, a departure from the two previous administra­tions.

President Donald Trump’s engagement with Latinos has been complicate­d. During his campaign, Trump turned off many Latinos with his harsh anti-immigratio­n rhetoric, including disparagin­g Mexican immigrants as criminals and rapists. He criticized rival Jeb Bush for answering a reporter’s question in Spanish, saying the former Florida governor “should really set the example by speaking English while in the United States.”

Aguirre’s departure follows that of another high-profile Latino, Carlos Diaz-Rosillo, who in June left his job at the White House as deputy assistant to the president and director of policy and interagenc­y coordinati­on to become a senior deputy chairman at the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Before joining the administra­tion, Díaz-Rosillo had taught at Harvard in the Government Department. He did not reply to a message from the AP requesting comment.

The recent changes leave these Latinos serving closest to Trump: Mercedes Schlapp, White House director of strategic communicat­ions; Jennifer Korn, special assistant to the president and deputy director for the Office of Public Liaison; Juan Cruz, senior director for Western Hemisphere affairs at the National Security Council.

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