- Source: List of Trump administration dismissals and resignations
Many political appointees of Donald Trump, the 45th president of the United States, resigned or were dismissed. Multiple publications have called attention to the record-setting turnover rate in the first year of the Trump Administration. Several Trump appointees, including National Security Advisor Michael Flynn, White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus, White House Communications Director Anthony Scaramucci, and Secretary of Health and Human Services Tom Price have had the shortest service tenures in the history of their respective offices.
Trump articulated the reasons for the break in custom, saying: "We have acting people. The reason they are acting is because I'm seeing how I like them, and I'm liking a lot of them very, very much. There are people who have done a bad job, and I let them go. If you call that turmoil, I don't call that turmoil. I say that is being smart. That's what we do."
For comprehensiveness, the list below includes, in addition to dismissals and resignations, routine job changes such as promotions (e.g., Gina Haspel from CIA Deputy Director to Director), officials moving to a comparable position (e.g., John F. Kelly from Secretary of Homeland Security to Chief of Staff), and acting or temporary officials being replaced by permanent ones. The list does not include many lower-level positions, however, such as that of executive director of the United States Interagency Council on Homelessness, Matthew Doherty, whom Trump dismissed in November 2019, without a replacement to lead the council that was created in 1987. But some less prominent officials are listed because their departure was newsworthy.
Officials who resigned in the aftermath of the 2021 United States Capitol attack, well into the then-underway presidential transition of Trump's successor Joe Biden, when their term would have ended soon anyway, are also listed on this page.
Color key
Color key:
Denotes appointees serving in an acting capacity.
Denotes appointees to an office which has since been abolished
Executive Office of the President
Office of the Vice President
Department of Agriculture
Department of Commerce
Department of Defense
Department of Education
Department of Energy
Department of Health and Human Services
Department of Homeland Security
Department of Housing and Urban Development
Department of the Interior
Department of Justice
Department of Labor
Department of State
Department of Transportation
Department of the Treasury
Department of Veterans Affairs
Intelligence community
Independent agencies
Banks
In the aftermath of the 2021 Capitol attack
Dozens of Trump administration officeholders resigned in reaction to the Capitol storming, even though their terms in office would expire fourteen days later with the inauguration of President Biden. Some senior officials, however, decided against resigning in order to ensure an orderly transition of power to the incoming Biden administration.
Three members of the National Security Council resigned prematurely.
Five senior officials at the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) resigned in protest.
See also
Hiring and personnel concerns about Donald Trump
List of Donald Trump nominees who have withdrawn
List of short-tenure Donald Trump political appointments
Notes
References
External references
Brookings Institution: Tracking turnover in the Trump administration (Jan. 2021)
ABC News: A list of officials who have left the Trump administration (2018)
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- List of Trump administration dismissals and resignations
- First cabinet of Donald Trump
- Hiring and personnel concerns about Donald Trump
- List of short-tenure Donald Trump political appointments
- First presidency of Donald Trump
- List of Department of Defense appointments by Donald Trump
- List of Donald Trump nominees who have withdrawn
- Stephen Miller (political advisor)
- List of resignations from government
- Immigration policy of Donald Trump