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Trump Dismisses White House Communications Director 10 Days after Appointing him | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive 2005 -2017
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US President Donald Trump meets with newly appointed White House chief of staff John Kelly on July 31, 2017. (AFP)


Washington – The White House announced on Monday that its communications director Anthony Scaramucci has left his post due to “inappropriate” remarks he had made, revealed President Donald Trump’s spokeswoman, only ten days since he was appointed to the post.

Sarah Huckabee Sanders said the president believed that his recent off-color remarks to The New Yorker were “inappropriate, adding that Scaramucci will not have a position in the administration.

“What matters most to us is not who is employed at the White House but who is employed in the rest of the country,” she added.

Sanders said that four-star general John Kelly will have “full authority” to bring structure and discipline to the White House. Kelly was sworn in Monday as chief of staff. He replaces Reince Priebus, a Republican Party operative who was ousted last week after the spectacular failure of Trump’s bid to repeal Obamacare and as his ugly feud with Scaramucci spilled into the open.

It was not immediately clear who would replace Scaramucci.

Former spokesman Sean Spicer, who resigned a little over a week ago, refused to comment on whether he will now remain in the White House beyond his planned August departure.

During its first six months in office, Trump’s White House has been beset by scandal, investigations, infighting, leaks, sackings, resignations, stinging legislative defeats and historically low approval ratings.

Scaramucci was brought in a little over a week ago to get the White House back on message, but quickly prompted negative headlines of his own.

He publicly called then colleague and chief of staff Priebus a “paranoid schizophrenic” and denounced chief White House strategist Steve Bannon in lurid sexual terms.

The White House refused to say whether it was Trump or Kelly who precipitated Scaramucci’s shock departure, but it seems clear that both were unhappy with his presence.

“The president firmly felt that Anthony’s comments were inappropriate for a person in that position,” Sanders remarked.

Sanders added that everyone in the West Wing — including Scaramucci — reported to Kelly, a return to tradition for a White House that has been anything but.

“General Kelly has the full authority to operate within the White House, and all staff will report to him,” said Sanders. “That includes everybody at the White House.”

Kelly inherits the day-to-day running of an administration that — far from marching in lockstep — looks like a regiment pinned down by heavy fire, getting conflicting orders from their commander and squabbling over the way forward.

In previous administrations, the chief of staff has acted as a chief operating officer: organizing staff, managing the president’s schedule and deciding who gets access to him when.

In Trump’s White House, a rotating cast of family and staff with unclear roles and opaque job titles seemed to be able to walk into the Oval Office at will or get the president’s ear.

After an Oval Office swearing-in ceremony before the afternoon theatrics, Trump confidently predicted Kelly, a 67-year-old combat veteran, would do a “spectacular job.”

“I predict that General Kelly will go down as, in terms of the position of chief of staff, one of the great(est) ever,” Trump said.

“What he has done in terms of homeland security is record-shattering, if you look at the border, if you look at the tremendous results we’ve had.”