BFF-05 Trump taps budget head Mulvaney as acting chief of staff

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BFF-05

US-POLITICS-MULVANEY

Trump taps budget head Mulvaney as acting chief of staff

WASHINGTON, Dec 15, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Donald Trump announced Friday that his
budget director Mick Mulvaney will step in as acting chief of staff to
replace John Kelly — amid indications the president is struggling to fill
the key post.

Trump, whose presidency is increasingly embroiled in legal troubles,
announced earlier this month that Kelly, a former Marine Corps general, was
leaving.

Kelly, who reportedly fell out with other close Trump aides, is only the
latest in a long string of high-ranking officials to quit the embattled White
House.

“Mick has done an outstanding job while in the Administration,” Trump said
on Twitter. “I look forward to working with him in this new capacity as we
continue to MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!

“John will be staying until the end of the year. He is a GREAT PATRIOT and
I want to personally thank him for his service!”

Kelly agreed to stay on until at least January 2 to avoid leaving the
president in the lurch.

However, even with several weeks’ notice, Trump appears to be having
difficulty in finding the right replacement.

“For the record, there were MANY people who wanted to be the White House
Chief of Staff. Mick M will do a GREAT job!” Trump wrote.

His widely reported first choice, Nick Ayres, announced last weekend that
he did not want the post.

Ayres, a 36-year-old Republican consultant currently serving as chief of
staff to Vice President Mike Pence, was seen as a good fit for Trump’s plan
to start focusing on his 2020 re-election.

With Democrats taking over the House of Representatives in January and
special prosecutor Robert Mueller near the end of an explosive probe into the
Trump campaign’s contacts with Russia during the 2016 election, the president
is believed to be seeking a sharp political operator.

A major Republican figure, former New Jersey governor Chris Christie,
announced Friday that he too was pulling out from consideration.

It was not immediately clear where Mulvaney fits into those longer-term
plans.

Mulvaney, a conservative Republican former congressman, is currently head
of the White House budget management office, which oversees federal spending
and administers the federal budget.

He was also previously acting head of the Consumer Financial Protection
Bureau, which protects consumers when they take loans and use credit cards.

While in the job, Mulvaney provoked anger in the Democratic Party with his
campaign to downgrade the agency.

His new appointment appears to give Trump some breathing space ahead of the
holidays, which the president will spend mostly at his Florida resort.

But a question still hangs on who can do the difficult job in the long
term. Kelly was often described as “the adult in the room” during the
turbulent period since his appointment in July 2017.

In an interview with Fox News this week, Trump said that his ideal
candidate was “somebody that’s strong, but I want somebody that thinks like I
do.”

BSS/AFP/GMR/0749 hrs