When John Kelly replaced Reince Priebus as White House chief of staff, there was plenty of speculation about whether, and to what extent, he could improve Donald Trump’s flailing presidency. Five weeks later, it’s probably fair to say the White House is at least … different.
By all accounts, Kelly, a retired four-star general and the former Secretary of Homeland Security, has brought an improved structure to the West Wing. The chief of staff has changed the flow of information into the Oval Office; he’s ended the practice of various people just stopping by the president’s desk to chat; and phone calls to Trump are now more tightly controlled.
In other words, Kelly has tried to bring a traditional White House discipline — comparable to what every modern president has had — to Team Trump.
And by some accounts, Kelly’s boss hates it. Politico published a piece on Wednesday, quoting a source close to the president saying his mindset in recent weeks is “the worst it’s ever been.” The Washington Post takes this further today, reporting that Trump “appears to pine for the days when the Oval Office was a bustling hub of visitors and gossip, over which he presided as impresario.”
Yes, just five weeks into Kelly’s tenure, Trump is reportedly bristling at his chief of staff’s management and structure.
Trump chafes at some of the retired Marine Corps general’s moves to restrict access to him since he took the job almost a month ago, said several people close to the president. They run counter to Trump’s love of spontaneity and brashness, prompting some Trump loyalists to derisively dub Kelly “the church lady” because they consider him strict and morally superior.









