WASHINGTON — Susie Wiles, President Donald Trump's understated but influential chief of staff, criticized Attorney General Pam Bondi's handling of the Jeffrey Epstein case and offered an unvarnished take on her boss and those in his orbit in a series of observations that were published Tuesday in Vanity Fair. The magazine's two-part profile of Wiles immediately sent shock waves through Washington while sending the West Wing into damage control.
The first woman to ever hold her current post, Wiles pushed back on what she described as a ''hit piece'' that lacked context. But neither she, nor other West Wing officials who came to her defense, disputed any details in the profile — a wide-ranging narrative that included Wiles' assessments of the teetotaling Trump as having "an alcoholic's personality," Vice President JD Vance as a calculating ''conspiracy theorist'' and Health Secretary Robert Kennedy Jr. as ''quirky Bobby.''
On Epstein, Wiles told the magazine that she underestimated the scandal involving the disgraced financier, but she sharply criticized how Bondi managed the case and the public's expectations. She said at one point that Trump's tariffs had been more painful than expected. She conceded some mistakes in Trump's mass deportation program and suggested that the president's retribution campaign against his perceived political enemies has gone beyond what she initially wanted.
But Wiles, who managed Trump's 2024 comeback campaign, broadly defended the president's aggressive second term agenda, including affirming that Trump wants to keep bombing alleged drug boats in the waters off the coast of Venezuela until that country's leader, Nicolas Maduro, ''cries uncle.''
Wiles pushed back but without any denials
After the comments were published, Wiles disparaged it as a ''disingenuously framed hit piece on me and the finest President, White House staff, and Cabinet in history.''
''Significant context was disregarded and much of what I, and others, said about the team and the President was left out of the story,'' she wrote in a social media post. ''I assume, after reading it, that this was done to paint an overwhelmingly chaotic and negative narrative about the President and our team.''
Wiles did not deny the comments that were attributed to her.