Will Trump Endorse Anyone in Texas GOP Senate Runoff?
AOC Predicts Gerrymandering War Between Blue and Red States
Trump Just Laid Waste to Hakeem Jeffries After His Comments About the Supreme...
Tim Walz Doesn't Seem to Object to Graham Platner's Use of This Word...
Vote Blue No Matter Who? We Did Nazi That Coming
Joe Biden Throws His Support Behind Keisha Lance Bottoms for GA Governor
Scott Jennings Calls Out Seth Moulton for Suggesting Secretary Hegseth Be Executed for...
Gavin Newsom Has Some Audacity Complaining About Gas Prices
CNN's Abby Phillip Actually Asked Hard Questions on Graham Platner
Scott Jennings Schools CNN Panel on American History With the Iran War
Scott Bessent Reveals the True State of Iran Amid the US Blockade: Like...
As Desperation Grows, Iran Considers Deploying Explosive Dolphins Against US Blockade
Republican Mayoral Candidate in LA Surges in the Polls Following Legendary Campaign Ad
President Trump Announces a 25 Percent Tariff on the EU After Trade Agreement...
DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin Reveals the True Cost of the 76-Day Partial Government...
Tipsheet

Here's What Sanders Had to Say About Reports She's Leaving

Here's What Sanders Had to Say About Reports She's Leaving

White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders shot down a report Wednesday that said she was planning to leave the White House at the end of the year, saying she was “honored” to work with President Trump and “loves” her job.

Advertisement

Sanders took to Twitter to respond to the CBS News report that said she and deputy press secretary Raj Shah were leaving. The report cited anonymous “sources inside the White House and close to the administration.”

“Does @CBSNews know something I don’t about my plans and my future? I was at my daughter’s year-end Kindergarten event and they ran a story about my “plans to leave the WH” without even talking to me. I love my job and am honored to work for @POTUS,” she wrote. 

CBS also reported that more departures are expected soon.

Over the course of the Trump administration, the White House has consolidated its workforce, eliminating jobs and assigning multiple portfolios of responsibility to individual staffers. Some positions have never been filled. Despite the smaller number of positions, the record-setting turnover rate has not slowed. Less than halfway through Mr. Trump's term, the turnover rate stands at 51 percent, according to the Brookings Institution. Turnover during Mr. Trump's first year in office was 34 percent -- nearly four times higher than turnover during the first year of the Obama administration.

"There will be even more people leaving the White House sooner rather than later, laid off or just leaving out of exhaustion. And it is going to be harder to find good people to replace them," a source close to the administration told CBS News. "I do think they're going to have a harder time getting the second wave of people in than the first, because those people were loyalists, and [new] folks will have to be recruited and encouraged and then survive the vetting process. In addition to all of that, the president prefers to have a small communications staff."

Advertisement

Time will tell. 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos