Jon Sopel, The Independent
Everyone loves a good political whodunnit. But in Washington this week they’re playing a slight variant of that game; it’s a why-she-dunnit. The who is Susie Wiles, Donald Trump’s fearsome, efficient, no-nonsense chief of staff. The why is why did she sit down for a whole series of on-the-record interviews with Vanity Fair to give her unvarnished views on the characters of the administration and the way policies were being implemented? It’s a mystery.
One of the reasons why this second Trump administration has been so successful — compared to the first — is largely down to her. She is the dealmaker extraordinaire behind the scenes. The president has even called her Susie Trump — and what bigger compliment could she be paid than that? This from the man who loves his surname so much it attaches to hotels, golf courses, and soon to the iconic arts centre in DC, the Kennedy Centre — which is apparently set to become the Trump Kennedy Centre.
It’s not just that she keeps the competing egos around Trump in check. She’s even able to tell Trump to rein it in. This week the president gave a televised address to the nation about America’s struggles with the cost of living. Sure, bits of it sounded like one of his rally speeches. But he stuck to the autocue script. He didn’t ad lib. He didn’t veer from the message. She had told him firmly he had to stick to the words in front of him, and he couldn’t go over 20 minutes. He stuck to time; he did exactly as he was told.
For all the noise and clatter there still is, this is a much more disciplined operation that the first term. And Susie Wiles is rightly being accredited with delivering that. But the one law of political survival in the Trump jungle is the unquestioning acceptance that he is king, and if there is one person upon whom all the sunlight and media attention must shine, it is him. Never, ever start generating your own headlines, but that is exactly what Susie Wiles has done.
So let’s go back to our question: why? The person interviewing her from Vanity Fair was Chris Whipple. He is not some rookie reporter. He is an author and has long been a chronicler of the role of the chief of staff, that near impossible 24/7 job. And he has spoken to plenty of former chiefs in his time. There’s nothing unusual in that. What is extraordinary is to give those interviews — 11 of them! — while you are still in post, and not on “deep background” but on the record.
In her telling, Trump (who is teetotal) “has an alcoholic’s personality” with a taste for vengeance; JD Vance has been a conspiracy theorist for a decade; Russell Vought, a key figure in the administration and who was behind the blueprint of the second term with Project 2025, is a “right-wing absolute zealot”.
On policy, she makes clear that she counselled Trump against pardoning the most violent rioters from January 6; he ignored her. She disagreed with Elon Musk’s chainsawing of USAID — and she has some choice observations about him and his drug habit. She reckons Pam Bondi, the attorney general, has s*****d up the handing of the Epstein files. And that Trump’s imposition of tariffs had been more painful than she had anticipated.
This is not what you expect from a serving chief of staff. What she’s said out loud is what you normally whisper quietly in the president’s ear. JD Vance gave a somewhat ambiguous response to the interview. He said he’d never seen Wiles ever be disloyal to the president. But was that a sentence that ended there or is it left hanging, with the words “until now” missing? I suspect he wanted it to be double-edged. For the moment there is no talk of Trump disposing of her. She is too valuable to him. But there will be some knives out for her now, and the air of infallibility around her will have gone.