Mick Mulvaney expected to depart White House after Senate impeachment trial wraps up
Acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney is widely expected to leave his current position once the Senate wraps up its impeachment trial and the intense scrutiny of the West Wing settles down, according to five aides and confidants to President Donald Trump.
The news Thursday that Republican Rep. Mark Meadows would not seek reelection and would instead work in some capacity for the president was interpreted throughout the White House and Trump world as Meadows morphing into Trump’s chief of staff in waiting — ready to assume the position in a second term if Trump wins reelection. Meadows has been spotted around the West Wing in recent weeks and has been one of Trump’s key advisers throughout the House impeachment process.
Story continuesWhile Mulvaney never took a traditional approach to the job and viewed his role based on the “let Trump be Trump” approach, he still got tripped up in the position by a mercurial president and a White House staff that tends to operate like a group of independent contractors pursuing their own portfolios.
Mulvaney also urged Trump late last year to shut down the government as leverage to land additional funding for a border wall, a move that backfired politically on Republicans. Trump had to reopen the government 35 days later with no tangible wins and with the distinction of overseeing the longest government shutdown in history.
“While he does not have the authority of a traditional chief of staff, he has been able to influence certain policy and budget priorities that do not come into the line of sight for the president,” said one of the Republicans close to the White House.
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