From Daily Kos <[email protected]>
Subject Trump’s inner circle finally admits the mess
Date December 16, 2025 10:30 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
<[link removed]>



Trump’s top aide exposes White House chaos—and regrets it



White House chief of staff Susie Wiles left few people unscathed in a sweeping
Vanity Fair profile published Thursday—an unusually candid and, at times,
blistering account from one of the most powerful figures in the Trump
administration.

In the tell-all interview, Wiles describes Vice President JD Vance as “a
conspiracy theorist for a decade.”

The remark lands amid lingering speculation over Vance’s political
transformation—from once likening President Donald Trump to Adolf Hitler to
becoming one of his fiercest defenders. Wiles suggests that the shift was less
ideological than opportunistic, calling it “sort of political.”

Speaking in Pennsylvania on Thursday, Vance defended Wiles as unwaveringly
loyal, saying he has “never seen her be disloyal to the president of the United
States.”

He also emphasized that Wiles has never contradicted Trump behind the scenes
or worked against him in private.

Regarding his own reputation as a conspiracy theorist, Vance offered a wry
caveat.

“Sometimes I am a conspiracy theorist, but I only believe in conspiracy
theories that are true,” he said.









No sugar-coating it: Daily Kos needs your help. Can you chip in $5 today?
<[link removed]
On Record&addr1=&city=Cedar Knolls&state=District of Columbia&phone=>

Donate $5
<[link removed]
On Record&addr1=&city=Cedar Knolls&state=District of Columbia&phone=>





In her interview, Wiles is equally unsparing toward Office of Management and
Budget Director Russell Vought, calling him “a right-wing absolute zealot.”

Vanity Fair notes that Vought was the “architect of the notorious Project
2025,” the Heritage Foundation-backed blueprint to radically reshape the
federal government.

Wiles also weighed in on Elon Musk’s short-lived effort to slash $2 trillion
from the federal budget, an initiative that ended with Musk conceding he could
cut only about $150 billion by the end of 2026. And when asked about Musk’s
increasingly erratic public behavior, Wiles did not mince words.

“I think that’s when he’s microdosing,” she says, referring to a
since-deleted post in which Musk argued that leaders like Joseph Stalin and
Hitler “didn’t murder millions of people. Their public sector workers did.”

Wiles also claims that Musk is an “avowed ketamine [user],” echoing The New
York Times’ claim that Musk heavily used drugs while working in the White
House, including sometimes mixing ketamine with other drugs. The Times also
notes that Musk is an avid user of ecstasy, psychedelic mushrooms, and Adderall.

Wiles, however, says she never had firsthand knowledge of Musk’s drug use.

Trump himself was not spared, with Wiles describing him as having an
“alcoholic’s personality,” drawing a comparison to her father, legendary NFL
broadcaster Pat Summerall, who struggled with alcoholism before getting sober.

“Some clinical psychologist that knows one million times more than I do will
dispute what I’m going to say,” Wiles says. “But high-functioning alcoholics,
or alcoholics in general, have exaggerated personalities when they drink. And
so I’m a little bit of an expert in big personalities.”

“[Trump] operates [with] a view that there’s nothing he can’t do,” she added.
“Nothing. Zero. Nothing.”

Trump does not drink, citing his older brother Fred’s alcoholism and early
death. Instead, he is known for his Diet Coke habit, which led to the
installation of a button on the Resolute Desk that summons the beverage at the
press of a button.

Wiles, the famously media-shy aide whom Trump calls the “Ice Maiden,” made
the comments to Vanity Fair’s Chris Whipple. Wiles is the first woman to serve
as White House chief of staff and has been one of Trump’s most loyal and
influential advisers, previously managing his 2024 campaign.

Despite maintaining a lower public profile than many Trump aides, Wiles is
widely viewed as a central force inside the administration.

“So many decisions of great consequence are being made on the whim of the
president,” a former Republican tells Whipple. “And as far as I can tell, the
only force that can direct or channel that whim is Susie. In most White Houses,
the chief of staff is first among a bunch of equals. She may be first with no
equals.”









No billionaire backers, no paywalls. Daily Kos news exists because of YOU, our
small-donor community. Now, we need your help. Please donate today.
<[link removed]
On Record&addr1=&city=Cedar Knolls&state=District of Columbia&phone=>

Click here to donate
<[link removed]
On Record&addr1=&city=Cedar Knolls&state=District of Columbia&phone=>





Wiles says that, while she has difficult conversations with Trump every day,
they are rarely about major constitutional or moral questions.

“They’re over little things, not big,” she says. “I hear stories from my
predecessors about these seminal moments where you have to go in and tell the
president what he wants to do is unconstitutional or will cost lives. I don’t
have that.”

Wiles added that she chooses carefully when to push back.

“So no, I’m not an enabler. I’m also not a bitch,” she says. “I try to be
thoughtful about what I even engage in. I guess time will tell whether I’ve
been effective.”

Perhaps most striking are Wiles’ comments on Trump’s appetite for revenge,
calling efforts to prosecute one of his enemies “retribution” and saying that
the two reached a “loose agreement” to move past “score settling” within the
first 90 days of his second term.

“Yes, I do,” Wiles told Whipple in March when asked whether she urges Trump
not to run a “retribution tour.”

But when Whipple raised the issue again in August, he says Wiles pushed back
on the idea that Trump was seeking vengeance.

“A governing principle for him is, ‘I don’t want what happened to me to happen
to somebody else,’” Wiles says. “In some cases, it may look like retribution.
And there may be an element of that from time to time. Who would blame him? Not
me.”

Pressed on Trump’s allegations that New York Attorney General Letitia James
committed mortgage fraud, Wiles concedes, “That might be the one retribution.”

Attempts by the Justice Department to prosecute James were dismissed in
November, as were charges brought against former FBI Director James Comey.

“I don’t think he wakes up thinking about retribution,” Wiles says of Trump.
“But when there’s an opportunity, he will go for it.”

After publication, Wiles moved quickly to reclaim the narrative on Thursday
morning. In a statement, she denounces the Vanity Fair profile as “a
disingenuously framed hit piece,” arguing that key context had been omitted to
portray the White House as chaotic and negative.

Insisting that the administration had “already accomplished more in eleven
months than any other President has accomplished in eight years,” she credits
what she calls Trump’s “unmatched leadership and vision,” and says that nothing
in the story would slow the push to “Making America Great Again.”

But the tension between the statement and the interview lingers. Wiles may
reject the portrait, but it was drawn largely in her own words. And it is
rare—if not unprecedented—for a sitting White House chief of staff to speak
this candidly about the president, his impulses, and the people around him.

Whether that candor ultimately strengthens Trump’s operation or exposes it may
matter less than the fact that it’s now officially on the record.

Click here to check out this story on DailyKos.com.
<[link removed]>









We're not asking for much



The average donation to Daily Kos has been just $9.44. These donations may
seem small, but they're a big deal to us. In fact, they are our largest source
of income. We literally couldn't do the work we do without them. Can you join
thousands of other Daily Kos readers and help us with a donation of $9.44 right
now?

Donate $9.44
<[link removed]
On Record&addr1=&city=Cedar Knolls&state=District of Columbia&phone=>







You received this email because you signed up for newsletters from Daily Kos.
To stop receiving this newsletter, unsubscribe
<[link removed]>
ormanage
<[link removed]
On Record&city=Cedar Knolls&state=District of Columbia&country=United
States&metadataCustom=testunsub> which newsletters you receive.
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis

  • Sender: n/a
  • Political Party: n/a
  • Country: n/a
  • State/Locality: n/a
  • Office: n/a