The Mercury News

Another day, another ouster

Trump’s ‘No WH chaos’ tweet belied by Scaramucci’s demise as communicat­ions director

- By Brian Bennett and Noah Bierman Los Angeles Times

Anthony Scaramucci, the brash New Yorker who was announced just 11 days ago as President Trump’s incoming communicat­ions director, was ousted on Monday as new White House Chief of Staff John Kelly moved quickly to exert control over a chaotic administra­tion.

Kelly pulled Scaramucci aside shortly after 6:30 a.m. and told him he was out of the job that he hadn’t yet officially assumed, according to a person close to the White House. That was just after Kelly, the former Homeland Security secretary, was sworn in as chief of staff to replace the displaced Reince Priebus — and a few hours after Trump had tweeted “No WH chaos!”

While Scaramucci’s time at the center of the president’s circle was short, it was consequent­ial, prompting Priebus’ departure on Friday and, a week before that, Sean Spicer’s resignatio­n as White House press secretary. Scaramucci also pushed out an assistant press secretary, Michael Short, who resigned last week after Scaramucci accused him of leaking.

Both Priebus and Spicer had counseled Trump against naming Scaramucci, given what they considered his unsuitabil­ity for the job.

In a sign of the breakneck speed at which the White House turmoil is playing out, Scaramucci had not even officially begun his job when he was

forced out, while Spicer, the man he replaced, had not actually left yet because he had agreed to help with the transition.

Scaramucci, a former hedge fund executive who enjoyed the limelight, had come on strong in his brief tenure, which was highlighte­d by a profane tirade against Priebus and White House strategist Stephen K. Bannon in an exchange last week with a reporter for the New Yorker magazine.

In a statement announcing the developmen­t, the White House said Scaramucci “felt it was best to give Chief of Staff John Kelly a clean slate and the ability to build his own team.”

In recent days, Scaramucci, known as “the Mooch,” seemed to revel in a new nickname, Trump’s “Mini-Me,” that was in wide circulatio­n and reflected their similariti­es as outspoken and sometimes foul-mouthed wheeler-dealers from New York.

Yet Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said Trump took issue with Scaramucci’s conduct and “found it inappropri­ate for a person in that position.”

The abrupt shift, however, seemed to reflect Kelly’s arrival. The mission for the retired Marine general is to bring order to the chain of command within the White House; cutting Scaramucci was reportedly a condition for his taking the chief of staff job.

That personnel change amounted to undoing Trump’s own hiring decision. Scaramucci publicly said he would report directly to the president, although communicat­ions directors typically report to the chief of staff as does everyone else on staff.

Sanders confirmed Kelly’s power, one that Priebus didn’t enjoy: “Gen. Kelly has the full authority to operate within the White House and all staff will report to him.”

The White House declaratio­n of full authority in Kelly’s hands poses a major test for Trump, who has resisted numerous attempts at imposing structure since the early days of his presidenti­al campaign.

How Trump conducts himself, including whether he limits his frequent and often surprising posts on Twitter, will determine as much as anything how well Kelly can manage the administra­tion — and, if Kelly can’t, how long he is willing to stay in the job.

Scaramucci’s sacking, in the wake of the other recent resignatio­ns and speculatio­n about the fates of Bannon, Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions and national security advisor H.R. McMaster, reflects a moment of extreme turbulence in the White House. The staff has been embroiled in infighting as factions struggle to respond to Trump’s low poll numbers, a flounderin­g legislativ­e agenda and the investigat­ions into Russian election meddling, possible Trump campaign collusion and obstructio­n of justice by the president.

Before coming to the White House a week and a half ago, Scaramucci had been appointed to a senior role at the Export-Import Bank, a relatively obscure agency, but he won’t be returning to that job.

“He does not have a role at this time in the Trump administra­tion,” Sanders said.

Kelly’s influence might have been at work in another personnel matter — stemming speculatio­n about whether Trump would remove his attorney general.

Sanders, who last week repeatedly declined to say whether Sessions had the president’s full confidence, in her Monday briefing responded to a question on Sessions’ job status by replying that Trump had “100% confidence” in all of his Cabinet secretarie­s.

Trump himself said “time will tell” when he was asked last week about Sessions. The president has called Sessions “beleaguere­d” and even “very weak” and publicly has said that his frustratio­n with Sessions, once among his closest allies, stems from Sessions’ decision to recuse himself from the Russia investigat­ion, an act that led to the appointmen­t of a special counsel.

Sanders also batted down reports that the White House was discussing moving Sessions to head the Department of Homeland Security, the job made vacant by Kelly’s move to the White House.

After word spread of Scaramucci’s ouster, Spicer, who despite his resignatio­n had stayed on to help with the transition for his replacemen­t, walked out of his office to a throng of reporters.

“Is this a surprise party?” he asked.

Trump himself seemed pleased with how things had unfolded. At 6:19 p.m., the president wrote on Twitter: “A great day at the White House!”

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