Trump’s chief of staff doesn’t attend India trip because of cold, sources say
President Donald Trump’s acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney did not travel with him to India as scheduled at the last minute, according to four people who say he has a cold and was advised not to go.
A senior administration official who briefed reporters Friday originally listed Mulvaney along with 11 others who were expected to travel with the President for his two-day visit to the world’s most populous democracy, but Mulvaney did not board Air Force One with the others Sunday, according to two people familiar with what happened.
Several aides found out Sunday that Mulvaney would no longer be traveling to India. According to one person close to Mulvaney, White House doctors advised against having him travel in such close proximity to the President and first lady for the two-day trip.
Mulvaney also did not travel with Trump on his four-day swing out West last week either, which aides took as a potential sign he likely wouldn’t remain in the job much longer because both of his predecessors stopped traveling with the President near the end of their tenures, too.
Instead he was in London, where during a question-and-answer session at Oxford Union, Mulvaney said: “I disagree with the President every single day. You just don’t hear about it — that’s not my job.”
While there, Mulvaney met with an aide to British Prime Minister Boris Johnson about a decision to allow Huawei equipment to be used in Britain’s 5G wireless network.
A source denied Mulvaney’s absence on the India trip was a sign of his status in the West Wing and only had to do with his illness.
When asked about how he felt about his acting chief of staff before leaving for India Sunday, Trump said: “Yeah. Sure. He’s here now. Sure. No problem.”
Mulvaney is the third person to sit in the chief of staff’s office during Trump’s first term. His predecessors, Reince Priebus and John Kelly, each left after losing influence with the President. While Kelly had sought to enforce strict discipline in the West Wing after a looser approach from Priebus, Mulvaney has eased those restrictions, allowing a more freewheeling style to take hold.
The White House legislative affairs director, Eric Ueland, was also removed from the trip’s manifest shortly before the President left for India, which one official attributed to a communication mix-up.