Who is Susie Wiles, Donald Trump's new White House chief of staff?
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[November 08, 2024]
By MEG KINNARD
WASHINGTON (AP) — With her selection as President-elect Donald Trump 's
incoming White House chief of staff, veteran Florida political
strategist Susie Wiles moves from a largely behind-the-scenes role of
campaign co-chair to the high-profile position of the president's
closest adviser and counsel.
She's been in political circles for years. But who is Wiles, the
operative set to be the first woman to step into the powerful role of
White House chief of staff?
She has decades of experience, most of it in Florida
The daughter of NFL player and sportscaster Pat Summerall, Wiles worked
in the Washington office of New York Rep. Jack Kemp in the 1970s.
Following that were stints on Ronald Reagan's campaign and in his White
House as a scheduler.
Wiles then headed to Florida, where she advised two Jacksonville mayors
and worked for Rep. Tillie Fowler. After that came statewide campaigns
in rough and tumble Florida politics, with Wiles being credited with
helping businessman Rick Scott win the governor's office.
After briefly managing Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman's 2012 presidential
campaign, she ran Trump's 2016 effort in Florida, when his win in the
state helped him clinch the White House.
She has a history with Ron DeSantis
Two years later, Wiles helped get Ron DeSantis elected as Florida's
governor. But the two would develop a rift that eventually led to
DeSantis to urge Trump's 2020 campaign to cuts its ties with the
strategist, when she was again running the then-president's state
campaign.
Wiles ultimately went on to lead Trump’s primary campaign against
DeSantis and trounced the Florida governor. Trump campaign aides and
their outside allies gleefully taunted DeSantis throughout the race —
mocking his laugh, the way he ate and accusing him of wearing lifts in
his boots — as well as using insider knowledge that many suspected had
come from Wiles and others on Trump’s campaign staff who had also worked
for DeSantis and had had bad experiences.
Wiles had posted just three times on X this year at the time of her
announcement. Shortly before DeSantis dropped out of the presidential
race in January, Wiles made a rare appearance on social media. She
responded to a message that DeSantis had cleared his campaign website of
upcoming events with a short but clear message: “Bye, bye.”
She shuns the spotlight — most of the time
Joining up with Trump's third campaign in its nascent days, Wiles is one
of the few top officials to survive an entire Trump campaign and was
part of the team that put together a far more professional operation for
his third White House bid — even if the former president routinely broke
through those guardrails anyway.
She largely avoided the spotlight, even refusing to take the mic to
speak as Trump celebrated his victory early Wednesday morning.
But she showed she was not above taking on tasks reserved for
volunteers. At one of Trump’s appearances in Iowa in July of last year,
as the former president posed for pictures with a long line of voters,
Wiles grabbed a clipboard and started approaching people waiting to get
them to fill out cards committing to caucus for Trump in the leadoff
primary contest.
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Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump brings
Susie Wiles to the podium at an election night watch party
Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024, in West Palm Beach, Fla. (AP Photo/Alex
Brandon)
“If we leave the conference room after a meeting and somebody leaves
trash on the table, Susie’s the person to grab the trash and put it
in the trash can,” said Chris LaCivita, who served as campaign
co-chair along with Wiles.
Another of her three posts on X this year was in the closing days of
the campaign, clapping back after billionaire Mark Cuban remarked
that Trump didn’t have “strong, intelligent women” in his orbit.
After Wiles’ selection as White House chief of staff, Sen. Marco
Rubio of Florida, a Trump backer, quipped on X that the
president-elect had chosen a “strong, intelligent woman” as his
chief of staff.
She can control some of Trump's worst impulses
Wiles was able to help control Trump’s worst impulses — not by
chiding him or lecturing, but by earning his respect and showing him
that he was better off when he followed her advice than flouted it.
At one point late in the campaign, when Trump gave a widely
criticized speech in Pennsylvania in which he strayed from his
talking points and suggested he wouldn't mind the media being shot,
Wiles came out to stare at him silently.
Trump often referenced Wiles on the campaign trail, publicly
praising her leadership of what he said he was often told was his
“best-run campaign.”
“She’s incredible. Incredible,” he said at a Milwaukee rally earlier
this month.
Will she have staying power?
In his first administration, Trump went through four chiefs of staff
— including one who served in an acting capacity for a year — in a
period of record-setting personnel churn.
A chief of staff serves as the president’s confidant, helping to
execute an agenda and balancing competing political and policy
priorities. They also tend to serve as a gatekeeper, helping
determine whom the president spends their time and to whom they
speak — an effort under which Trump chafed inside the White House.
Trump has repeatedly said he believes the biggest mistake of his
first term was hiring the wrong people. He was new to Washington
then, he has said, and didn’t know any better.
But now, Trump says, he knows the “best people” and those to avoid
for jobs.
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Associated Press writers Michelle L. Price and Zeke Miller in
Washington and Jill Colvin in West Palm Beach, Florida, contributed
to this report.
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