Trump deputy national security adviser to leave White House
Dina Powell, deputy national
security adviser to President Donald Trump, plans to leave the White House
after the President's first year in office, multiple senior administration
officials.
Powell, a Cairo-born,
Dallas-raised former executive at Goldman Sachs, first joined Trump's team
after advising his daughter Ivanka on women's empowerment issues. She moved to
the National Security Council in March.
Powell, the officials told CNN,
is leaving the administration on good terms with the President, unlike other
officials who have either resigned or been fired. She decided to leave the job
after a year.
Powell's departure could be the
first of many to come.
Officials have long expected that
some Trump aides will leave the White House in January, a year after the
President took office. It is traditional for administrations to experience a
spate of departures after the first year in office, but Trump's year has been
particularly bruising, leaving some officials preparing for more departures
than usual.
National security adviser H.R.
McMaster said in a statement that Powell has become "an invaluable member
of President Trump's team.""She is one of the most
talented and effective leaders with whom I have ever served," McMaster
said.
"All of us look forward to continuing to work with her, as she
continues to support this administration's efforts on Middle East peace and
other issues."
Powell spent the bulk of her time
at the National Security Council focused on Middle East peace, working closely
with Trump top aide and son-in-law Jared Kushner on building relationships with
leaders in the region. She also worked with other national security officials
to develop the administration's strategy.
Kushner said on Friday that
Powell "has done a great job for the administration and has been a valued
member of the Israeli-Palestinian peace team."
He added: "She will continue
to play a key role in our peace efforts and we will share more details on that
in the future."
Powell plans to move back to New
York, where her family lives.
A source inside the White House
said Powell has been quietly hoping that Secretary of State Rex Tillerson would
leave so US Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley would take over the
State Department and she could assume Haley's current job.
White House press secretary Sarah
Sanders described Powell as a "key, trusted adviser" to the
President.
"She has always planned to
serve one year before returning home to New York, where she will continue to
support the President's agenda and work on Middle East policy," Sanders
said. "She will serve in the administration until early next year."
Powell was brought onto the
National Security Council in March to work as an interlocutor between the White
House, the Pentagon and the State Department.
She came to the Trump
administration with a lengthy resume in Washington.
Powell, at 29, was the youngest
ever assistant to the President for presidential personnel, heading up all of
the George W. Bush White House's decisions on appointments. Afterward, Powell
worked as assistant secretary of state for educational and cultural affairs
under President Bush, and traveled extensively with then-Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice.
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