REVEALED: List of People President Elect Trump is Considering for Top White House Postions
11
November, 2016
IMPORTANT:
We are particularly worried about John Bolton and Rudolph Giuliani
holding major diplomatic positions – they are both damaged goods
and relics of a failed Neoconservative past which some Republicans
are acting nostalgic about. Both Bolton and Giuliani have pressed for
a pre-emptive strike on Iran in the past, and with continued pressure
and finance from the Israeli Lobby – it’s a near certainty that
they will continue this foreign policy line.
Trump
won the GOP primaries by rejecting the Bush docrine and the Neocon
model of foreign intervention. If Trump reverses that postion he is
only creating a new and more powerful anti-war oppostion in America.
A hawkish Trump policy would only galvanize the left in America, and
globally.
Let’s
see if he’s smart enough to realize this prospective reality and
appoint his cabinet accordingly…
TRANSITION:
Media currently carried away with speculation over what a ‘President
Trump’ administration will look like in Janruary.
Daily Calle
Donald
Trump is contemplating naming a number of recognizable players from
the 2016 campaign to serve in senior White House roles, according to
an internal transition document obtained exclusively by The Daily Calle.
The
list was provided by a member of the transition team on the condition
of anonymity because they are not authorized to speak to the press.
Described as a “working” document, it is being used to help the
president-elect envision a White House staff structure, the source
said. Some people are listed more than once.
It
includes names like Trump campaign chairman Stephen K. Bannon, RNC
chairman Reince Priebus, Trump campaign manager Kellyanne Conway,
former Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski and retired Army Lt.
Gen. Michael T. Flynn.
Bannon
— who was executive chairman of Breitbart News before joining the
Trump campaign — is under consideration for chief of staff, as is
Priebus. The choice here could be telling about Trump’s strategy
for working with Congress: Bannon, who is proudly anti-establishment,
detests House Speaker Paul Ryan while Priebus and Ryan are close
allies.
Like
chief of staff, a number of the roles listed seem to include both
insider and outsider options. For example, Kellyanne Conway, a
longtime Republican pollster, is in contention with Corey
Lewandowski, who worked with the New Hampshire state police until
2010, for the position of senior adviser.
Lewandowski
is also in consideration for the role of deputy chief of staff for
planning, as is Katie Walsh, the RNC’s chief of staff. As for White
House counsel, the list includes both Alan Garten, the general
counsel at the Trump Organization, and Donald McGahn, his campaign
attorney, as options.
Trump
policy adviser Stephen Miller — an immigration hawk and former
communications aide to Alabama GOP Sen. Jeff Sessions — is under
consideration for a variety roles, including deputy chief of staff
for policy, director of speechwriting, director of the domestic
policy council and director of communications. Miller often warmed up
for Trump during rallies in the Republican primary and embodies
Trump’s message of limited immigration, free trade skepticism and
distaste for the donor class.
Miller
isn’t the only former Sessions aide being considered for a Trump
administration. Rick Dearborn, Sen. Sessions’ chief of staff, is
listed as the sole option for leading the office of legislative
affairs.
Like
Sessions, former GOP Michigan Rep. Mike Rogers, formerly the chairman
of the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, appears likely to
have influence in the Trump administration. He is being considered
for both national security advisor and assistant to the president for
Homeland Security and Counterterrorism. His former chief of staff,
Andy Keiser, is also being considered for the position of deputy
national security advisor.
Two
other people listed for national security advisor are retired Army
Lt. Gen. Micheal Flynn, who served as head of the Defense
Intelligence Agency under President Barack Obama, and Stephen Hadley,
who served in the same role under former President George W. Bush.
Flynn, Rogers, and Hadley are all hawkish. Flynn has called for the
destruction of the Syrian city of Raqqa, Hadley served as deputy
national security adviser during the invasion of Iraq and Rogers said
in 2014 that ground troops should be deployed to fight the Islamic
State in Syria and Iraq.
As
for White House press secretary, the list includes some memorable
faces from the campaign: former Ted Cruz aide and eventual Trump
spokesman Jason Miller, top RNC aide Sean Spicer and Conway.
Here
is the list obtained by TheDC:
Assistant
to the President and Chief of Staff
Stephen
K. Bannon, Reince Priebus
Assistant
to the President for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism.
Keith
Kellogg, Mike Rogers
Assistant
to the President and Press Secretary.
Jason
Miller, Sean Spicer, Kellyanne Conway
Assistant
to the President and Deputy Chief of Staff for Planning.
Corey
Lewandowski, Katie Walsh
Assistant
to the President and Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy.
Stephen
Miller, Sam Clovis
Assistant
to the President and National Security Advisor.
Michael
T. Flynn, Mike Rogers, Stephen Hadley
Assistant
to the President and Director of Speechwriting.
Stephen
Miller, Cliff Sims
Senior
Advisor and Assistant to the President for Intergovernmental Affairs
and Public Engagement.
None
listed
Assistant
to the President and Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations.
David
Bossie, Katie Walsh
Assistant
to the President and Deputy National Security Advisor.
Clare
Lopez, Walid Phares, Andy Keiser
Assistant
to the President and Director of the Domestic Policy Council.
Stephen
Miller
Assistant
to the President and Director, Office of Legislative Affairs.
Rick
Dearborn
Assistant
to the President and Director of Communications.
Jason
Miller, Stephen Miller, Cliff Sims
Assistant
to the President and Senior Advisor
Kellyanne
Conway, Corey Lewandowski
Assistant
to the President for Economic Policy and Director of the National
Economic Council.
Dan
Dimicco, David Malpass
White
House Counsel
Don
McGahn, Alan Garten
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