Trump staffers are worrying about their next job

As lawmakers call for President Trump’s removal from office after Wednesday’s violent attempted coup, Trump is surrounding himself with an increasingly small circle of advisers.

“If anything, I hope to pitch [Wednesday] one day as ‘look if you want to talk about an employee who can continue to produce and continue to have a good attitude in the toughest, highest stakes and highest pressure situations, [that’s me],’” the official said. He stressed that he doesn’t condone violence.

Asked if he planned to resign because of the riots, the official said he’s already submitted his resignation letter, but it’s effective Jan. 20, when all political appointees have to leave anyways.

“A lot of us want to [also] build up a lot of vacation time as possible so we can get paid out what we’ve been planning to get paid out because a lot of us are going to be unemployed for some period of time because it has been an extraordinarily difficult time to get hired,” the official said.

With just a few weeks left in the Trump administration, and with other people working from home because of the pandemic, the current staffing situation in the White House could best be described as “in flux.” Two former White House officials said the West Wing was “barebones” and “extremely empty.”

“Yesterday was just completely counterproductive and harms the movement,” one of the former White House officials said.

A third former senior White House official said that the statement Trump put out early Thursday morning on deputy chief of staff for communications Dan Scavino’s Twitter account, in which he said he would accept a peaceful transfer of power, was partly an effort to stop mass resignations.

It wasn’t successful. At least twelve more Trump officials announced their resignation during the day on Thursday, including Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao, Education Secretary Betsy DeVos; special envoy to Northern Ireland Mick Mulvaney; Tyler Goodspeed, the acting chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors; Mark Vandroff, a senior National Security Council official and senior Commerce Department appointee John Costello.

By Thursday night, Trump had released a video, this time conceding his loss and urging for calm and reconciliation.

Some of those who left the administration excoriated Trump for egging on his supporters while glossing over the role they may have played in enabling the president.

“Clearly [Trump] is not the same as he was eight months ago,” former chief of staff Mick Mulvaney told CNBC after resigning from his special envoy position.

But the departures had a secondary effect: leaving the president surrounded by an ever smaller group of true loyalists. This group includes aides like Scavino and personnel director John McEntee, who have tightly tied their sails to Trump. It also includes those who have indulged Trump for the last two months on conspiracy theories about election fraud and who never seem keen on giving the president bad news. “[Mark] Meadows has been so scared that he’s just been telling him everything he wants to hear,” said one former White House official.

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