Sebastian Gorka, President Donald Trump's
national security aide, has departed from his White House position late
Friday.
It was not immediately clear whether Gorka had resigned or had been
fired. In a purported resignation letter obtained by the Federalist,
Gorka said the "best and most effective way" he could support President
Trump "is from outside the People’s House."
However, White House officials told Fox News late Friday that Gorka did
not actually resign, but confirmed he "no longer works" at the White
House.
A Trump adviser familiar with the circumstances of Gorka's departure
told Fox News that the deputy assistant recently had a tense phone
conversation with new White House Chief of Staff John Kelly in which
Kelly asked Gorka why he was on a long vacation in the middle of myriad
national security challenges.
When asked about his exit, Gorka texted Fox News a one-word response:
"Liberating."
Gorka later called to say that in terms of his vacation, Kelly "never
mentioned it for a millisecond."
Gorka's version is he called Kelly on Friday through the Situation Room
and told the chief of staff he was resigning and wanted to come into the
office on Monday to hand-deliver his resignation letter to the
president. Kelly basically short-circuited that by suggesting there was
no need for Gorka to come back to the White House.
In his letter, Gorka expressed dissatisfaction with the direction of the
Trump administration, saying that "given recent events, it is clear to
me that forces that do not support the [Make America Great Again]
promise are – for now – ascendant within the White House."
Gorka added that apart from Trump himself, "the individuals who most
embodied and represented the policies that will 'Make America Great
Again,' have been internally countered, systematically removed, or
undermined in recent months."
Gorka was a controversial figure in the Trump administration, with
Democrats accusing him of having ties to white supremacist groups. He
was also close to Steve Bannon, Trump's chief strategist who was fired
from the White House last week and has since returned to his former post
as the executive chairman of Breitbart News.
Last week, Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., said that Gorka and policy
adviser Stephen Miller should both be fired in the wake of a violent
white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Va.
"There certainly are a lot of people on the White House staff and
[National Security Council] staff that shouldn't be there, people like
Miller and Gorka and others, who not only, I think, represent the same
thing that Steve Bannon did but also aren't capable of doing the job
well," Schiff told CNN after Bannon's dismissal. "So, yes, I think
there's more cleaning house that ought to take place."
Fox News' Ed Henry and Serafin Gomez contributed to this report. The
Associated Press also contributed to this report
|
|