White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain Expected to Step Down

The White House from Washington, DC, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

The New York Times is reporting that White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain is expected to leave his post in the Biden administration in the coming weeks.

A powerful force, Klain helped guide President Biden’s agenda in its first two years. The report relies on accounts from two people familiar with Klain’s thinking.

The New York Times continues:

The officials, who discussed internal matters on condition of anonymity, would not say whether a successor has already been picked or when the decision would be announced, but indicated that it would come at some point after the president outlined his agenda for the coming year in his State of the Union address on Feb. 7. Mr. Klain likely would stay around for a transition period to help the next chief settle into the corner office that has been his command post for many crises and legislative battles.

His resignation would mark a striking moment of turnover at the top of an administration that has been relatively stable through the first half of Mr. Biden’s term, and Mr. Klain takes pride that he has lasted longer than any other Democratic president’s first chief of staff in more than half a century. But with Mr. Biden expected to announce by spring that he is running for re-election, advisers predict more moves as some aides shift from the White House to the campaign.

The departure would also come at a time when the White House faces a widening array of political and legal threats from a newly appointed special counsel investigating the improper handling of classified documents and a flurry of other inquiries by the newly installed Republican majority in the House. The next chief of staff will be charged with managing the defense of Mr. Biden’s White House and any counterattackas the 2024 election approaches.

Among the possible choices to replace Mr. Klain mentioned by senior officials are Labor Secretary Martin J. Walsh; former Gov. Jack A. Markell of Delaware, now serving as ambassador to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development; Anita Dunn, a senior adviser to Mr. Biden; Steven J. Ricchetti, the counselor to the president; Jeffrey D. Zients, the administration’s former coronavirus response coordinator; Susan Rice, the White House domestic policy adviser; and Tom Vilsack, the secretary of agriculture.

Klain had no comment to the Times’ inquiries.

This is a breaking news story. Click refresh for the latest updates.

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1 Comment
    Frank Joe Bob

    Great! Get another Delaware guy in there. That should straighten everything out. HA!

Comments are closed.

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