logo
Trump reveals how his 'Ice Maiden' chief of staff Susie Wiles has 'big shots' running 'scared'

Trump reveals how his 'Ice Maiden' chief of staff Susie Wiles has 'big shots' running 'scared'

Daily Mail​05-06-2025
President Donald Trump lavished praise on his chief of staff Susie Wiles, saying the 'big shots' were 'scared' of the woman referred to as the 'ice maiden.'
'She's the first woman chief of staff in the history of our country,' Trump said of Wiles at an event on the South Lawn of the White House to honor all the political appointees in his administration.
'I watch those men and she watches over them, and if they get a little bit out of line, they may be big, big shots, defense, they may be in Congress. They may be the biggest but they're scared of her. They don't want her coming after them,' he said as the crowd roared its approval.
He noted of Wiles that she's 'the most powerful woman in the world.'
And then he joked of her power: 'One phone call and a country is wiped out.'
The crowd of 3,000 staffers laughed and cheered.
Wiles has become a stoic but constant figure in the second Trump administration, laying down the law early on to the likes of former 'First Buddy' Elon Musk.
A veteran of GOP politics, Wiles saw her first victory on Trump's first day in office when he confirmed Musk would not have a desk in the West Wing.
Musk was reportedly pushing for his own room just yards from the Oval Office but his DOGE team will instead be based in the Eisenhower building, which is across the road from the White House.
The chief administrator of DOGE must also report to Wiles, a sign of her control over the White House.
Experts have long believed Wiles, who ran Trump's 2016 and 2020 Florida campaigns successfully, has what it takes to handle the president.
'She has an abundance of charm and she'll need every bit of it to survive this job,' said Chris Whipple, author of a book on the 2024 Trump campaign, noting that there were four chiefs of staff in Trump's first term.
Just two weeks before Trump took office, Wiles made it clear in an interview she was going to run a tight ship.
'I don't welcome people who want to work solo or be a star,' Wiles told Axios. 'My team and I will not tolerate backbiting, second-guessing inappropriately, or drama. These are counterproductive to the mission.'
Trump's first term in office was marked by infighting, backstabbing and leaks. Aides set up competing fiefdoms inside the West Wing and battled among each other to have the most influence on the president, a dynamic that played out in real time like a reality TV show.
Nicknamed the 'Ice Maiden' by Trump himself, Wiles takes a no-nonsense approach to her job. She is the first woman to occupy the chief of staff's office.
Wiles is a mother and grandmother who is a lifelong Republican who was all-in on the MAGA agenda when it hit the scene in the mid 2010s. She is the daughter of legendary former NFL player and commentator Pat Summerall.
The White House chief of staff did press secretary work for years and worked as a campaign scheduler on President Ronald Reagan's 1980 campaign. She was also chief of staff for the Mayor of Jacksonville, Florida from 1996-1999.
She said early on that the staff are prepared to work long, hard hours in order to hit the ground running.
'The West Wing staff is a mix of new and veterans — many are young, all are prepared to work punishing hours,' she said. 'To my core, I believe in teamwork. Anyone who cannot be counted on to be collaborative, and focused on our shared goals, isn't working in the West Wing.'
Wiles is credited with running an efficient, well-organized campaign in 2024.
During the Cabinet nomination process, she imposed a social media ban on his Cabinet nominees, ordering them not to post without approval.
'While this instruction has been delivered previously, I am reiterating that no member of the incoming administration or Transition speaks for the United States or the President-elect himself,' Wiles wrote in a memo reported by the New York Post.
'Accordingly, all intended nominees should refrain from any public social media posts without prior approval of the incoming White House counsel.'
One of the top responsibilities of the chief of staff is managing the president's time and who has access to him.
Trump chafed at such restrictions in his first term in office, when he went through four chiefs of staff in four years. Aides often slipped into the Oval Office to speak to him, knowing he was most likely to listen to the last person in the room.
Additionally, Trump also spoke frequently to outside advisers, family members and other people who got access to him - often upending processes and decision making with his last minute changes.
Wiles is highly respected in politics and is credited with running a disciplined, professional campaign operation that gave Trump an enormous victory in November.
Long before Wednesday night's message, Trump has publicly talked of his admiration and respect for her.
'Susie is tough, smart, innovative, and is universally admired and respected,' he said in a statement when he announced her as his chief of staff.
'Susie will continue to work tirelessly to Make America Great Again.'
However, she has been willing to give Trump some hard truths after the 2020 election loss and advised him on how to turn it around in the next cycle.
'Coming to him after the 2020 election in [20]21 and telling him what he thought was the circumstance, wasn't, which is how I got into all this,' she revealed in a March interview.
'He said, 'well, can you fix it?'' Wiles recalled. 'But he's such a resilient person and he's seen so much, it's very hard to surprise him.'
She appears to be referring to how she helped Trump turn around his loss in 2020 into a win in 2024.
The White House chief of staff has said that ultimately, her job is to 'keep the trains on the tracks' of Trump 2.0
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump says he was NEVER briefed by Pam Bondi on his name being in Epstein files
Trump says he was NEVER briefed by Pam Bondi on his name being in Epstein files

Daily Mail​

time13 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Trump says he was NEVER briefed by Pam Bondi on his name being in Epstein files

President Donald Trump on Friday denied ever being briefed by Attorney General Pam Bondi that his name was in the Jeffrey Epstein files. 'No, I was never briefed. No,' he told reporters after he landed in Scotland to visit his golf courses. But Bondi briefed Trump during a May 2025 meeting that his name was found in the Epstein documents 'multiple times,' according to reports. Other high-profile individuals are also named. Just because the president is named in the files does not implicate him in any wrongdoing or connect him to Epstein's child sex trafficking crimes. Administration officials told the Wall Street Journal that Bondi's May meeting with Trump was a routine briefing covering a number of topics - and the Epstein files weren't the focus. White House communications director Steven Cheung slammed the Journal's report as 'fake news' in a statement to the Daily Mail. 'The fact is that the President kicked him out of his club for being a creep. This is nothing more than a continuation of the fake news stories concocted by the Democrats and the liberal media, just like the Obama Russiagate scandal, which President Trump was right about,' he said when the report came out earlier this week.

Trump administration to release over $5 billion school funding that it withheld
Trump administration to release over $5 billion school funding that it withheld

Reuters

time15 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Trump administration to release over $5 billion school funding that it withheld

WASHINGTON, July 25 (Reuters) - President Donald Trump's administration will release more than $5 billion in previously approved funding for K-12 school programs that it froze over three weeks ago under a review, which had led to bipartisan condemnation. "(The White House Office of Management and Budget) has completed its review ... and has directed the Department to release all formula funds," Madi Biedermann, deputy assistant secretary for communications at the U.S. Education Department, said in an emailed statement. "The agency will begin dispersing funds to states next week," Biedermann added. Further details on the review and what it found were not shared in the statement. A senior administration official said "guardrails" would be in place for the amount being released, without giving details about them. The release of the more than $5 billion amount was reported earlier by the Washington Post. Early in July, the Trump administration said it would not release funding previously appropriated by Congress for schools and that an initial review found signs the money was misused to subsidize what it alleged was "a radical leftwing agenda." States say $6.8 billion in total was affected by the freeze. Last week, $1.3 billion was released. After the freeze, a coalition of mostly Democratic-led states sued to challenge the move, and 10 Republican U.S. senators wrote to the Republican Trump administration to reverse its decision. Republican U.S. lawmakers welcomed the move on Friday, while Democratic lawmakers said there was no need to disrupt funding in the first place. The frozen money covered funding for education of migrant farm workers and their children; recruitment and training of teachers; English proficiency learning; academic enrichment and after-school and summer programs. The Trump administration has threatened schools and colleges with withholding federal funds over issues like climate initiatives, transgender policies, pro-Palestinian protests against U.S. ally Israel's war in Gaza and diversity, equity and inclusion practices.

Inside the room where a $41 million 'House of Friendship' deal led to a titanic Trump and Epstein showdown
Inside the room where a $41 million 'House of Friendship' deal led to a titanic Trump and Epstein showdown

Daily Mail​

time43 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Inside the room where a $41 million 'House of Friendship' deal led to a titanic Trump and Epstein showdown

Donald Trump 's voice boomed out across the auction room as it became clear he was determined to win the bidding battle for one of the most palatial mansions in Florida. There was only one man standing in his way - the other bidder was Jeffrey Epstein. The auction on November 15, 2004 appears to have been the final time the two men's paths crossed and, by all accounts, it was not friendly. They appear to have never spoken after it. Around the same time, Trump banned Epstein from his nearby Mar-a-Lago club for being a 'creep.' Weeks later, police were pursuing Epstein over allegations involving underage girls. The titanic hour-long auction struggle was relayed to the Daily Mail by an insider present in the room on the seventh floor of non-descript office building in Palm Beach. Both Trump and Epstein were determined to buy Maison de l'Amitie - 'The House of Friendship' - a glorious six-acre French Regency-style estate on 'Billionaires' Row' overlooking the Atlantic. It had come up for auction after the owner, Abe Gosman, a nursing home tycoon, declared bankruptcy. Gosman died in 2013. Judge Steven Friedman presided over the hearing with a speakerphone next to him on his desk. 'This was before the advent of Zoom so the bankruptcy judge allowed bidders to bid by telephone,' the insider said. Bidders tended to use representatives and Epstein pursued that strategy. Trump had a lawyer representing him in the room, but placed his own bids from afar. 'There was a speaker on the judge's table and everyone had a dial-in number,' the insider said. 'Mr Trump did the bidding himself. We knew it was him, we recognized the voice. I was surprised. Mr Trump said he was going to outbid everyone. 'In my recollection he just made it clear he was going to win the bid. He said something to the effect of "I will continue bidding." 'The Apprentice had just started and he was that persona - very confident, very authoritative.' About 40 people - lawyers and Florida real estate types - packed into the room. Rather than a courtroom, it was a banal space in the offices of a medical company. The auction itself was the culmination of a lengthy battle for control of Maison de l'Amitie. According to the bankruptcy trustee Epstein and Trump had both already lobbied hard to buy it. The insider said the starting price had been 'about $20 million.' Epstein, his bids relayed by an intermediary, went all the way up to $38.6 million before finally dropping out. A third bidder, another Florida developer, then made a surprise entry. Trump was undeterred and outbid him too with an offer of $41.35 million. The third bidder did not return a request for comment. Another intriguing aspect of Maison de 'l'Amitie may have spurred Epstein's intense interest in it. It had once been owned by the Victoria's Secret fashion mogul Les Wexner. Epstein had started managing Wexner's money in the late 1980s. It was through Wexner that Epstein acquired his massive mansion in Manhattan, a seven-story, 21,000 square foot behemoth less than a block from Central Park. Wexner sold his entire interest through which he owned the Manhattan property to an entity owned by Epstein in 1998. Wexner later severed all connections with Epstein and said he was 'embarrassed' by his former ties to someone who was 'sick, so cunning, so depraved.' Previously, in 1988, Wexner had sold Maison de l'Amitie to Gosman for $12 million. Gosman built a 64,000 square foot home with a pool house and tennis pavilion, and filled it with expensive works of art before declaring bankruptcy. After winning the auction for it in 2004, Trump told the Palm Beach Daily News: 'My initial feeling is to utilize the existing house and create the second greatest house in America, Mar-a-Lago being the first. 'It's the finest piece of land in Florida and probably in the U.S..' A few years later he hired Karen Todd, the winner of season 3 of 'The Apprentice,' to oversee upgrades to the property. In 2008 Trump sold the property for a Palm Beach record residential price of $95 million to Russian billionaire Dmitry Rybolovlev. Epstein killed himself in a New York jail cell in 2019 after being charged with sex trafficking. That year, when asked about Epstein, Trump said he had not spoken to him since about 2004. He said: 'Well, I knew him like everybody in Palm Beach knew him. I mean, people in Palm Beach knew him. He was a fixture in Palm Beach. 'I had a falling out with him a long time ago. I don't think I've spoken to him for 15 years. I wasn't a fan.' The White House has since indicated that the falling out was to do with Epstein being a 'creep' rather than the property auction. This week, White House spokesman Steven Cheung said: 'The fact is that the president kicked him (Epstein) out of his club for being a creep.' It has been reported that Epstein behaved inappropriately with a Mar-a-Lago member's daughter. That may have added steel to Trump's determination to crush Epstein in the auction, and to declare victory in what would prove to be their final encounter.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store