The Atlantic

Trump Doesn’t Want a Chief of Staff

Someone needs to get the White House under control—but the president won’t let it happen.
Source: Danny Wild / USA Today Sports / Reuters

Before a president begins thinking about who should be his White House chief of staff, he has to define both the job and the moment. There’s nothing magical about the chief of staff’s corner office in the West Wing. How any individuals perform in the job depends, first, on the power the president gives them to execute their responsibilities, and second, on their expertise facing whatever’s in front of the White House in that moment. So how should that inform President Donald Trump as John Kelly takes his leave?

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