Newsletter
Frank
Bruni
Opinion
The Most
Important Thing We Learned From Susie Wiles
Dec. 22,
2025
Frank
Bruni
By Frank
Bruni
Mr. Bruni
is a contributing Opinion writer who was on the staff of The Times for more
than 25 years.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/22/opinion/susie-wiles-vanity-fair-trump.html
Vice
President JD Vance is “a conspiracy theorist.” Russell Vought, the director of
the Office of Management and Budget, isn’t merely a zealot; he’s a “right-wing
absolute zealot.” And President Trump governs with an “alcoholic’s
personality.”
Ever
since the publication last week of a two-part article in Vanity Fair in which
Susie Wiles, the White House chief of staff, said all of that and more,
political observers have been asking: Why did she do it? Why discard her usual
discretion and speak so frankly, on the record, about her cracked compatriots
in the Trump administration?
It’s a
great question, but it’s not the most important one, which is this: Why does
she do it? I’m referring not to the interview but to her job. If she can see
the incoherence, immoderation and instability all around her, why abet it?
To both
questions, the answer — or at least one of the answers — is surely the same.
Wiles has been given a plum part in history (not to mention a history-making
part, in that she’s the first woman in her role). She relishes that, enough to
want recognition, enough to consent to 11 interviews with the journalist Chris
Whipple, enough to position herself during those conversations as the
even-keeled sage appraising everyone around her. How fitting that Whipple’s
portrait of her appeared in a publication named Vanity Fair.
“I don’t
ever seek attention,” she told Whipple at one point, a statement that’s a laugh
line, though it’s unclear whether Whipple saw it that way and it’s obvious that
Wiles didn’t. I repeat: 11 interviews. Over the course of nearly a year. She
spoke to Whipple on Sundays, after going to church. She spoke to him while she
was doing laundry. She left an Oval Office meeting early to go speak with him.
The Garbo of the West Wing, she’s not.
The first
year of Trump’s return to the White House has shown or reminded us of many
things, including the fragility of democracy, the prevalence of cowardice and
the intensity of tribalism. But it has been an especially stark and galling
education in the intoxication of power.
And Wiles
is a more illuminating entry on that syllabus than other senior administration
officials, who wear their vainglory so conspicuously it might as well be a
sandwich board spelling out their attachment to their entourages, to their
letterheads, to the pomp and the perks. Many of them — Pete Hegseth, Robert F.
Kennedy Jr., Kash Patel — lack the credentials to be given anything remotely
resembling such high-ranking jobs by anyone other than a destructionist like
Trump, and they’re surely too thrilled by their outrageous fortune to gaze
skeptically at any uncomely aspect of it. Besides which, those three, along
with other presidential aides and advisers, are as rapacious, reckless and
altogether rotten as Trump.
But Wiles
is different. She’s a seasoned political pro who has often, relative to others
in her line of work, kept to the background. She doesn’t take to social media
to advertise her every brain spasm as some eureka insight and raptly monitor
the odometer of likes and shares. She had prominent political assignments
before Trump and could have significant political roles independent of him. And
she has never come across as an ardent ideologue, so dedicated to certain
policy aims that all manner of compromise in their service would be OK.
But when
Trump beckoned her to join him as he returned to the White House, she came. She
came despite her awareness of how quickly he’d cycled through chiefs of staff
and other senior aides during his previous term. She came despite knowing — as
does any sensate creature even casually observing America over the past decade
— how vicious and volatile he can be. She came with eyes open to his biases,
having worked on all three of his presidential campaigns. Briefing Whipple on
Trump’s tropisms, she observed: “He’s said it a million times — ‘I judge people
by their genes.’” That nugget drew less notice than the digs at Vance and
Vought. But it’s a doozy, especially given Trump’s frequent rants about
immigration and I.Q.
Whipple’s
portrait of her suggests that she is in many ways ideologically simpatico with
Trump and genuinely believes that he has done good. She acknowledges excesses
and sloppiness — regarding tariffs, deportations and more — but says that
sometimes, to restore balance, you must yank things hard in the direction
opposite from where they stand. She seems to hold some cabinet members in high
regard; her favorites inexplicably include Kennedy, whom she refers to as “my
Bobby.” The “my” fascinates. Like posing for glamour shots in a
celebrity-centric magazine, it challenges her reputation for self-effacement.
But that
sort of reputation can be as deliberate as any other. To be known as the humble
deckhand who steadies an otherwise rocky ship is nonetheless to be known; to be
seen as someone who doesn’t insist on getting credit is to get an especially
flattering kind of credit. She described for Whipple how she sits far to the
side during televised Oval Office gatherings, so she’s off camera. But isn’t
she edging her way back into the shot by telling Whipple that?
Wiles is
certainly no Hegseth, showily doing push-ups with the troops; no Patel, with
his premature expectorations; no Kristi Noem, zipping down to El Salvador for a
macabre photo op. But she’s also human, with an itch to make sure that her
presence and her sway at the pinnacle of power don’t go unnoticed, unrecorded,
underappreciated.
Even
someone like Wiles savors the air up there. Even if it’s toxic with conspiracy
theories and zealotry.


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