U.S. AG Sessions被炒;白宫管家Kelly、内政部长Zinke走人; 国防部长Mattis辞职; 国安部部长Nielsen辞职; Deputy AG 辞职;Kellyanne Conway辞职;国防部长艾斯珀被炒;国安部网络安全主任Chris Krebs被炒; AG Barr辞职

  • 主题发起人 主题发起人 ccc
  • 开始时间 开始时间
https://www.cnn.com/2019/04/08/politics/kirstjen-nielsen-last-days-dhs/index.html

How border hardliners nudged out Nielsen

)Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen left Washington last Sunday for what was supposed to be a week-long trip to Europe. While there, Nielsen planned to discuss cybersecurity and terror threats with senior UK and Swedish government officials, and attend a meeting of G7 interior ministers in Paris -- providing her a temporary respite from the tense situation at the US Southern border, where a recent rise in migrant apprehensions had drawn the intense ire of President Donald Trump.

Instead, the trip proved to be a miscalculation on her part, one that began a week-long descent into limbo for Nielsen that ended with her abrupt resignation on Sunday evening after meeting with Trump in the White House. Nielsen did not resign willingly, a person close to her told CNN, but was under pressure to do so. Nor did she fight or plead to keep her job, the source said.


DHS Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen's ouster exposes Trump's immigration crisis

The resignation ends months of speculation over her possible departure.
It also demonstrates the power of immigration hardliners inside the White House, including national security adviser John Bolton and senior adviser Stephen Miller, who, despite her defense of the administration's controversial policies, still deemed Nielsen insufficiently tough when it came to stemming the flow of migrants to the border.


According to multiple administration officials, over the past few months it had become clear to many inside the White House that Nielsen had few allies left in the West Wing, particularly following last year's departure of chief of staff John Kelly, widely seen as her biggest advocate in the White House.
Nielsen butted heads with Kelly's replacement Mick Mulvaney. Miller openly complained about her to the President. She was also a target of Bolton's, according to four people familiar with their relationship. Bolton often criticized Nielsen for how she was handling immigration issues and had no hesitation about expressing his reservations openly in front of President Trump.
Nielsen had no ally in the President's son-in-law Jared Kushner either, who has become more involved in immigration talks recently, according to one administration official. In a sense, Nielsen had become an island unto herself inside the West Wing, and the people who talk to Trump the most were openly against her.
By early Sunday, Nielsen knew how the day would likely go and that she would likely be forced to resign, according to a source familiar with her thinking.
Shortened Trip
In the weeks leading up to her Europe trip, Nielsen had been increasingly on thin ice in the eyes of the President. She apparently did not realize how tenuous her standing was when she left for Europe, but once there quickly realized her mistake and abruptly returned after her first day of meetings in London. Nielsen hastily left to travel to the US southern border, where she visited three border regions, ending at a stop in Calexico, California, to join the President.


Scramble inside the West Wing over Trump's threat to close the border

During the week, Nielsen did interviews -- including on CNN -- to try and improve the President's souring view of her, a source close to Nielsen said, but to little avail. Last week, she also convened an emergency call with members of Trump's Cabinet to discuss migration at the border.
"We are going to treat it as if we have been hit by a Cat 5 hurricane," Nielsen said on the call, a participant told CNN.
The call took White House officials by surprise, according to a person familiar with the matter. Neither Miller nor Trump cared for Nielsen's decision to treat the situation at the border as a hurricane, the person said. "People were caught off guard" by the Thursday call, they added. It appears Miller did not know what Nielsen was up to, a major problem according to this person.
At the end of the day, the source said, Nielsen could not make Trump happy with her performance on the border. This source said Trump might as well name Miller as the next DHS secretary. "He's the one driving the policy," the source added.
Miller was also behind the sudden withdrawal of the nomination of Ron Vitiello for director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which caught both Congress and the Department of Homeland Security by surprise. Nielsen was unaware what was happening until after the nomination was pulled, a person familiar with the news said.
Nielsen's resignation also follows plans to cut aid to some Central American countries, marking a sudden reversal after Nielsen had, days earlier, visited Honduras to sign a regional compact agreement with Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala.
Tenuous relationship
Trump hired Nielsen as DHS secretary, based on a strong recommendation from his former chief of staff John Kelly, but the President was rarely happy with her, a source told CNN.
Despite Trump's displeasure, she remained in place thanks to Kelly's ability to divert some of Trump's anger over immigration away from her and onto others, like former Attorney General Jeff Sessions, according to one source. There was also no clear replacement lined up in the event of Nielsen's departure.
A key moment came in May 2018, when Trump and Nielsen got into a lengthy, heated argument during a Cabinet meeting focused on immigration.
Trump was furious with Nielsen, telling her he didn't think she was doing enough to secure the border. But Nielsen stood her ground, citing the law in certain instances, the source said.
Nielsen increasingly pushed back when the President lashed out at her department for not doing more to stem the tide of undocumented immigrants.
A senior administration official said that in recent days Trump and Nielsen had again clashed over the issue. He accused her of not doing her job, and she responded forcefully.
Around the midterm elections in November, it was expected that Trump would ask Nielsen to resign. After the departure of Kelly as White House chief of staff, speculation increased that she would soon be following him out the door.
But by last December, sources told CNN that Trump had warmed to Nielsen, at least temporarily easing the tension in an explosive relationship that was once seen as untenable.
Trump soon began praising her repeatedly behind closed doors, which surprised officials who were used to hearing his frequent criticism of her.
"People overplayed this idea that Gen. Kelly was her protector and that after she left the White House, she would leave," said a former DHS official.
"The very active and leading role that she took on immigration, re-established her with the President in ways that maybe when General Kelly was still there wasn't possible," added the former DHS official.
But it wasn't enough to mend their relationship. And over the past three months, the surge of migrants continued to rise despite a slew of aggressive immigration policies.
Child Separations
Under Nielsen's leadership, thousands of families along the southern border were separated, sparking an uproar across the country last year.
Though it was the result of a policy implemented last year by Sessions, Nielsen was often cast as the face of family separations, and endured withering criticism as a result. While frustrated, one of the reasons Nielsen decided to stick it out was to repair her image, a source familiar with her thinking told CNN.


Incoming acting secretary of Homeland Security 'not an ideologue or fire breather'

Still, that policy and others that make it harder for migrants to claim asylum appear to have done little to deter migrants from journeying to the US-Mexico border. Customs and Border Protection Commissioner Kevin McAleenan, who is taking over DHS in an acting capacity, warned late last month that the US was on pace to encounter more than 100,000 migrants in March alone, making it "the highest month since 2008."
Relief and exasperation
A source familiar with Nielsen's thinking told CNN Nielsen is taking this as a relief. Nielsen "believed the situation was becoming untenable" with Trump "becoming increasingly unhinged about the border crisis and making unreasonable and even impossible requests," a senior administration official told CNN on Sunday.
In California on Friday, a senior administration official tells CNN, Trump told border agents he wanted them to stop letting people cross the border, despite the fact that Central American asylum seekers according to US law can do so.
It's unclear what Trump will look for in a permanent successor. For now, he has named McAleenan, the current CBP Commissioner, as acting secretary.
Nielsen leaves behind a bare bones department that not only oversees immigration issues but also cybersecurity, infrastructure protection, the Transportation Security Administration and the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
"We had a Secretary who knew cyber, knew FEMA, knew immigration," said an administration official. "Now you'll get someone who knows border and immigration, but may not know the rest of DHS."
"Secretary [Nielsen] worked harder than any cabinet person I know of, but probably had the most difficult job," the official added.
Asked about the mood at DHS following Nielsen's resignation, one DHS official told CNN there was, "some exasperation," adding that the department doesn't "have enough depth" to fill longtime vacancies.
"We are losing leadership faster than we can get it confirmed or even hired permanently," the official said, noting the number of acting officials in place heading units inside the department. DHS has had at least three positions filled by people in an acting capacity in senior roles.
"Now this is going to cause a massive move up the chain everywhere and it's rare an acting executive permanently selects anyone for those jobs so we'll be without permanent leaders that much longer."
CNN's Jeff Zeleny, Kaitlin Collins, Jim Acosta, Pamela Brown, Evan Perez and Boris Sanchez contributed to this report.
 
https://www.cnn.com/2019/04/08/politics/randolph-tex-alles-secret-service-director/index.html
Trump is removing US Secret Service director

(CNN)United States Secret Service director Randolph "Tex" Alles is being removed from his position, multiple administration officials tell CNN.

President Donald Trump instructed his acting chief of staff, Mick Mulvaney, to fire Alles. Alles remains in his position as of now but has been asked to leave.
The USSS director was told two weeks ago there would be a transition in leadership and he was asked to stay on until there was a replacement, according to a source close to the director.
Secret Service officials have been caught by surprise with the news and are only finding out through CNN, according to the source.


White House press secretary Sarah Sanders said later Monday that Trump has picked James M. Murray, a career USSS official, to replace Alles.


Stephen Miller wants Trump to oust more senior leaders at Homeland Security

"United States Secret Service director Randolph 'Tex' Alles has done a great job at the agency over the last two years, and the President is thankful for his over 40 years of service to the country. Mr. Alles will be leaving shortly and President Trump has selected James M. Murray, a career member of the USSS, to take over as director beginning in May," she said.
A source familiar with the director said his ouster was not related to the recent scrutiny the Secret Service got after a Chinese woman illegally entered the President's Mar-a-Lago club carrying Chinese passports and a flash drive containing malware.
Just five days ago, Trump said he "could not be happier with Secret Service" following the Mar-a-Lago incident.
"Secret Service has done a fantastic job from Day 1. Very happy with them," Trump said during a White House event when asked by reporters about the Mar-a-Lago trespasser.
The Secret Service director reports directly to the Secretary of Homeland Security, Kirstjen Nielsen, who resigned on Sunday amid growing pressure from the President. The director oversees the Secret Service's work on both protection and investigations.
"There is a near-systematic purge happening at the nation's second-largest national security agency," one senior administration official says.


How border hardliners nudged out Nielsen

United States Citizenship and Immigration Services director Francis Cissna and Office of the General Counsel's John Mitnick are expected to be gone soon, and the White House is eyeing others to be removed.
The President in recent weeks empowered Stephen Miller to lead the administration's border policies"and he's executing his plan" with what amounts to a wholesale decapitation or the Department of Homeland Security leadership, the official says.
Alles previously served in Customs and Border Protection leadership and also led that agency's Air and Marine Operations. He is a 35-year veteran of the Marine Corps.
CNN's Pamela Brown, Jeremy Diamond and Allie Malloy contributed to this report.
 
还差一位了....

White House Chief of Staff John Kelly
Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke
Defense Secretary James Mattis
Secretary of Homeland Security Kirstjen Nielsen

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross
要是Trump的税表被国会拿到,Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin 将会是下一个。
 
和公司 layoff 差不多,每早都是好心情去上班,反正不知道那一刀啥时砍下来 :D
 
upload_2019-4-29_18-44-7.png



U.S. Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein has submitted a letter of resignation to President Donald Trump.

Rosenstein's departure ends a nearly two-year run defined by his appointment of a special counsel to investigate connections between the Trump campaign and Russia.

The departure had been expected since the confirmation of William Barr as attorney general in February.

In his letter, Rosenstein says he will leave the post May 11.

Rosenstein intended to leave in mid-March but stayed on a little longer for the completion of Special Counsel Robert Mueller's Russia investigation. Mueller submitted his report to the Justice Department last month. Rosenstein and Barr concluded that Trump did not obstruct justice.

Rosenstein, who appointed Mueller in 2017 following the recusal of then-attorney general Jeff Sessions, had overseen his team's work for much of the last two years and defended his investigation.

He also defended the investigation against attacks from congressional Republicans and Trump, who often blasted it as a "witch hunt." In so doing, Rosenstein sometimes found himself at odds with Trump but was nonetheless spared the brunt of anger directed at Sessions, whose recusal infuriated the president, leading to his forced resignation last November.

In his letter, Rosenstein says to Trump, "I am grateful to you for the opportunity to serve; for the courtesy and humor you often display in our personal conversations; and for the goals you set in your inaugural address: patriotism, unity, safety, education, and prosperity."

But he goes on to quote former attorneys general about the importance of the law being non-partisan, and he writes himself, "the Department bears a special responsibility to avoid partisanship.

"We enforce the law without fear or favor because credible evidence is not partisan and truth is not determined by opinion polls."
 
美国的政府体系比加拿大的优越,各个部委领导可以由能者担任,而不是只会耍嘴皮子的政客。
 
掐一回指,下一个下台的是国务卿大人,不要问我为什么:cool:
 
后退
顶部