Trump nominates first female chief of staff
President-elect Donald Trump on Thursday named co-campaign chair Susie Wiles as his White House chief of staff, one of the most important nonelected posts in Washington.
Susie will be the first woman in that role, reports NBC.
Wiles, 67, a Florida native, is one of the most respected operatives in Republican politics. Along with helping helm Trump’s 2024 presidential campaign, she was his state director in Florida during the previous two contests.
“Susie Wiles just helped me achieve one of the greatest political victories in American history, and was an integral part of both my 2016 and 2020 successful campaigns,” Trump said in a statement Thursday. “Susie is tough, smart, innovative and is universally admired and respected.”
Trump called his 2020 campaign “successful,” even though he lost the race to Joe Biden. For years, he has continued to make baseless claims that that election was stolen.
Before she joined Trump’s team, Wiles helped lead Rick Scott to victory as governor of Florida in 2010. He is now a U.S. senator. Wiles was also brought in to help save the 2018 campaign of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who won after initially having floundered.
After Trump’s resounding victory Tuesday over Vice President Kamala Harris, there was an overwhelming sense that Wiles was the front-runner to be White House chief of staff.
“If she wants it, it’s hers,” a Trump adviser told NBC News on Thursday morning. “Her standing with Trump and what she just pulled off [winning by a huge margin] makes it an easy choice if she wants it.”
Turns out Wiles wanted the position, and now her role as de facto chief of staff will become official as the work of building a new administration begins. Wiles, the daughter of famed football player and sportscaster Pat Summerall, has professional roots planted in Republican politics going back to the 1970s.
She started as assistant to Jack Kemp, R-NY, in the House in 1979, was a personal secretary to Labor Secretary Raymond Donovan during the Reagan administration and spent significant time earlier in her career in Jacksonville, Florida, where she was a top staffer to Republican mayors John Delaney and John Peyton.