President Trump says chief of staff John Kelly to leave by year end

The favourite to take on the role, Nick Ayers, accompanied President Trump to attend a sports game

FILE - In this June 21, 2018 file photo, White House chief of staff John Kelly listens as President Donald Trump speaks during a lunch with governors in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington.  Trump says Kelly will leave his job at the end of the year, on Saturday, Dec. 8.  Trump isn’t saying immediately who will replace Kelly, a retired Marine general who has served as chief of staff since July 2017. But the president says an announcement about a replacement will be coming in the next day or two.   (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File)
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White House Chief of Staff John Kelly will leave the job near the end of the year, removing a key force for West Wing discipline from President Donald Trump’s inner circle.

Mr Trump announced Mr Kelly’s impending departure Saturday as he left the White House to travel to attend the Army-Navy football game. He didn’t name a successor.

Nick Ayers, Vice President Mike Pence’s chief of staff, has emerged as the favourite to replace Mr Kelly. Mr Trump has recently taken the unusual step of inviting Mr Ayers to accompany him on Air Force One, even without Mr Pence present, people familiar with the situation said.

The departure means Mr Trump will have a new top adviser by his side as he confronts a more perilous political climate. The president’s team is simultaneously girding to deal with a Democratic-led House of Representatives, a bruising 2020 re-election campaign and political warfare over the coming report from Special Counsel Robert Mueller.

Mr Kelly, a strong-willed former military commander, imposed a measure of discipline on Trump’s free-wheeling, tumultuous presidency. The retired Marine general clamped down on access to the Oval Office and brought order to the West Wing, though the president’s impulsive style still often prevailed.

Yet Mr Kelly, 68, has no experience in electoral politics. Mr Ayers, a 36-year-old former political consultant, is a veteran Republican operative.

Mr Kelly is following other senior aides who have headed for the exits in recent weeks. White House counsel Don McGahn departed in October, and Attorney General Jeff Sessions was ousted the day after the 6 November midterm elections.

Mr Kelly, a former Trump secretary of homeland security, had committed in July 2018 to stay on as chief of staff through at least 2020. Mr Trump had also asked him to continue in the job through 2024 if the president were to be re-elected.

But there is little chemistry remaining between the president and Mr Kelly, said people familiar with the matter.

Twice in the span of four months, Mr Kelly denied reports that he’d called the president an "idiot," including one account in journalist Bob Woodward’s book about the Trump administration, which was released in early September. Woodward wrote that Kelly often lost his temper and told colleagues that Trump was "unhinged."

"He’s an idiot. It’s pointless to try to convince him of anything. He’s gone off the rails. We’re in Crazytown. I don’t even know why any of us are here. This is the worst job I’ve ever had," Mr Kelly vented in one meeting, according to Mr Woodward.

After excerpts of the book appeared, Mr Kelly said in a statement that "the idea I ever called the president an idiot is not true." He added that Mr Trump “and I both know this story is total BS.”

Mr Kelly seemed in many ways a perfect fit to lead Mr Trump’s White House. The president has repeatedly filled high-level posts with retired generals, and Mr Kelly’s hard-line views on immigration also squared with those of his boss.

Mr Kelly weathered criticism for his handling of domestic violence allegations that forced out staff secretary Rob Porter in early 2018.

But his instinct to limit access to Mr Trump, especially by the president’s expansive orbit of friends and informal advisers, irritated Mr Trump and made Mr Kelly enemies.

The controversy over Mr Porter wasn’t Mr Kelly’s only setback. He had a knack for incendiary public remarks, especially about immigrants and minorities.

MR Kelly’s comments in May 2018 about the separation of migrant children from their parents were criticiSed as insensitive, after he told NPR that family separations were a "tough deterrent" and that children "will be taken care of -- put into foster care or whatever."

Three months earlier, he told reporters on Capitol Hill that some undocumented immigrants brought to the country as children were “too lazy” to sign up for a program protecting them from deportation.

In 2017, he described Representative Frederica Wilson, a black Democrat, as an “empty barrel” after she criticised Mr Trump’s phone call to the mother of a soldier killed in an ambush in Niger. Mr Kelly also inaccurately described one of Ms Wilson’s speeches.

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Mr Kelly drew criticism for his relationship with Congress, and especially his involvement in a failed immigration deal. Senators of both parties charged that he pushed his boss to renege after Democrats believed they had reached agreement on an outline for legislation. Mr Kelly also admitted alerting lawmakers and staffers with hard-right views on immigration before one meeting between Mr Trump and more moderate lawmakers.

Mr Kelly’s exit compounds the sense of flux in an administration in which three communications directors, a national security adviser and a press secretary exited the White House in just over a year, along with many lower-level aides. The president’s staff largely comprises aides who survived a purge Kelly initiated early in his tenure that forced out prominent figures including Steve Bannon and Omarosa Manigault Newman.