The Capital

Trump’s team cuts dozens of RNC staff in loyalist takeover

- By Steve Peoples

WASHINGTON — Just days after installing his new leadership team at the Republican National Committee, Donald Trump’s lieutenant­s are cutting dozens of staff across key department­s in an aggressive move that further cements the former president’s takeover of the GOP’s political and fundraisin­g machinery.

More than 60 people were fired in all, including senior staff in the political, data and communicat­ions department­s inside the committee’s Washington headquarte­rs. The cuts also included staff that ran the committee’s celebrated community centers, which were focused on building relationsh­ips with minority groups in some Democratic-leaning states.

The sweeping overhaul was confirmed by multiple people with direct knowledge of the cuts who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the moves publicly.

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., celebrated news of the staffing cuts, suggesting they send a clear message about the direction of the GOP.

“MAGA is now in control of the Republican Party!!” Greene wrote on X, referencin­g Trump’s “Make America Great Again” movement. “We will continue to need everyone’s help all the way across the finish line! Do not grow weary.”

Trump’s lieutenant­s telegraphe­d major changes late last week as Republican National Committee

members gathered in Houston to approve his hand-picked leadership team, which includes his daughter-in-law Lara Trump as the committee co-chair. Michael Whatley, a former North Carolina GOP chairman, replaced Ronna McDaniel as the chair.

The cuts are designed to eliminate duplicatio­n as the Trump campaign and the RNC work to become essentiall­y one organizati­on, said Chris LaCivita, a Trump campaign senior adviser who took over as the RNC chief of staff after Friday’s vote.

Staffers were notified of the cuts in an email Monday afternoon from the committee’s new chief operating officer, Sean Cairncross, who offered them an opportunit­y to reapply for their jobs.

The email, obtained by The Associated Press, indicated that those who choose not to reapply must leave by the end of March. Some staffers were told to leave immediatel­y on Monday afternoon, however.

The Trump campaign and the RNC have worked closely in past elections, but the new overhaul marks an unpreceden­ted level of integratio­n between the former president’s campaign and the GOP’s formal political and fundraisin­g apparatus, which is tasked with helping Republican­s win elections up and down the ballot. The size and scope of the new changes within the GOP’s formal political and fundraisin­g apparatus may take several weeks to become clear.

Aware of internal concerns about the level of the committee’s commitment to Trump, LaCivita said last week that “not a penny of the RNC’s money” would go to pay Trump’s mounting legal fees.

 ?? WYKE/AP
MICHAEL ?? New Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Whatley, left, and new co-chair Lara Trump greet attendees at the RNC’s Spring Meeting on Friday in Houston.
WYKE/AP MICHAEL New Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Whatley, left, and new co-chair Lara Trump greet attendees at the RNC’s Spring Meeting on Friday in Houston.

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