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Mick Mulvaney to be acting White House chief of staff

Mick Mulvaney named acting chief of staff
Trump names Mick Mulvaney acting chief of staff 02:30

The White House chief of staff sweepstakes is over for the moment — and Mick Mulvaney is the winner President Trump announced Friday on Twitter. 

The president is tapping Mick Mulvaney, the current director of the Office of Management and Budget, to assume the role of acting chief of staff. But Mulvaney isn't leaving his day job. He will still technically be the head of OMB, White House press secretary Sarah Sanders said. 

"Mick Mulvaney will not resign from the Office of Management and Budget, but will spend all of his time devoted to his role as the acting chief of staff for the president," Sanders said. "Russ Vought will handle day to day operations and run OMB."

It's not the first time Mulvaney has worn two hats. He was also recently the acting head of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Mulvaney will replace outgoing White House chief of staff John Kelly, who is set to leave at the end of the year, with a transition period.

But it's unclear how long Mulvaney will be the "acting" chief of staff, or whether he will continue receiving his OMB salary or a salary as acting chief of staff. When Mr. Trump announced Kelly's impending departure on the White House South Lawn earlier this month, he suggested he might select someone on an interim basis — but it's unclear if that's what this is for Mulvaney.

Mr. Trump later tweeted there were "for the record, there were MANY people who wanted to be the White House Chief of Staff."

Mulvaney said he was honored to have been selected. 

"This is a tremendous honor. I look forward to working with the president and the entire team. It's going to be a great 2019!" Mulvaney tweeted. 

Only hours earlier, the president had a list of five candidates, according to Kellyanne Conway, counselor to the president. Names CBS News had reported as potential contenders included Trump son-in-law and senior adviser Jared Kushner and former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, among others.

It's unclear why the president has selected Mulvaney to serve with the "acting" title when Mr. Trump's first pick, Vice President Mike Pence's chief of staff Nick Ayers, bowed out of the running when Mr. Trump wouldn't accept a three-month, interim tenure.

Even after the Mulvaney announcement, Mr. Trump insisted that "many" people wanted the job, amid reporting and speculation that it isn't a desirable role given how Mr. Trump has treated his current and former chiefs of staff. 

"For the record, there were MANY people who wanted to be the White House Chief of Staff. Mick M will do a GREAT job!" he tweeted Friday night. 

Asked why Mulvaney will be serving as "acting" chief of staff, without the permanent title, one senior White House official told reporters, "We'll see. I mean, it's what the president wanted for right now, and if we have changes we'll let you know."

One administration official, speaking to reporters, cited Mulvaney's experience as a "former member of Congress."
 
"He knows Congress. He knows Capitol Hill," the official said of Mulvaney, adding that he is "fiscally responsible."

The career of 51-year-old Mulvaney has risen quickly through the ranks. Only two years ago, he was a South Carolina congressman, known for his fiscal prudence. He will now be responsible for guiding the president through the budget process and attempting to bring down the national debt. But Mr. Trump has pushed for big spending — especially when it comes to defense — and his tax cuts haven't helped alleviate deficits, either.

Mulvaney will also have to help steer Mr. Trump through Democratic probes in Congress when the opposing party takes control in January. Democrats are intensely interested in the president's business ventures, as well as his tax returns. The current OMB director will also have to aid the president as special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation progresses apace, and Mr. Trump declares it a "witch hunt."

Mulvaney reports for duty when Kelly departs at the end of the year.

Sara Cook contributed to this report. 

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