White House spokesman Sean Spicer resigned yesterday, ending a brief and turbulent tenure that made him a household name, amid further upheaval within President Donald Trump’s inner circle.
A White House official confirmed the departure of Spicer, 45, and said Trump had named former Wall Street financier Anthony Scaramucci as his new top communications official.
While not a surprise, Spicer’s departure was abrupt and reflected the turmoil in Trump’s legal and media teams amid a widening investigation of possible ties between Trump’s campaign and Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election.
Parodied memorably by actress Melissa McCarthy on the Saturday Night Live television comedy show for his combative encounters with the White House press corps, Spicer became one of the Trump administration’s most recognised figures.
From the beginning, he invited controversy, attacking the media in his debut appearance as press secretary for reporting what he called inaccurate crowd numbers at Trump’s inauguration.
“This was the largest audience to ever witness an inauguration, period, both in person and around the globe,” he said, an assertion that quickly drew scorn.
The White House official gave no reason for Spicer’s resignation. The New York Times reported he quit over Scaramucci’s appointment. Spicer had been serving as press secretary and communications director.
“It’s been an honour & privilege to serve @POTUS @realDonaldTrump & this amazing country,” Spicer wrote in a Twitter post yesterday. “I will continue my service through August.”
Before being tapped by Trump for the job of press secretary, Spicer was spokesman for the Republican National Committee. He also had previously worked in the administration of former president George W Bush, a time when he dressed up in an Easter Bunny costume for the annual White House Easter Egg Roll.
Spicer and other Trump aides shook up White House dealings with the media, including cutting back daily televised news briefings and replacing them with audio briefings only.
Separately, special counsel Robert Mueller, who is investigating the possible Trump-Russia ties, has asked White House officials to preserve any records of a meeting last year between the president’s eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., and a Russian lawyer, a source with knowledge of the request said yesterday.
Attorney general Jeff Sessions on Thursday brushed off sharp criticism from Trump, saying he loved his job and planned to continue serving.
Trump took a broad swipe at his administration’s top law officers this week in a New York Times interview, saying he would not have appointed Sessions as attorney general if he had known he would recuse himself.
Unrest among White House officials was not confined to legal and communications staffers, said two officials familiar with the situation.
Trump has ignored the recommendations of national security adviser H R McMaster and his senior director for Russia, Fiona Hill, on dealing with Russian President Vladimir Putin, the officials said.
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