What to know from Susie Wiles' interviews with 'Vanity Fair,' according to the writer
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What to know from Susie Wiles' interviews with 'Vanity Fair,' according to the writer
"A new Vanity Fair profile by author Chris Whipple cracks open the private world of a White House Chief of Staff who rarely speaks and, when she does, doesn't hedge. Speaking with All Things Considered, Whipple said the piece is based on 11 in-depth, on-the-record interviews over the past year, with an extraordinary level of access to Susie Wiles. "Every once in a while in the course of your career as a reporter, lightning strikes," Whipple told NPR."
"In Whipple's reporting, Wiles doled out criticism for multiple colleagues in and around the White House including saying Attorney General Pam Bondi "completely whiffed" on her handling of the Epstein files, and calling Vice President J.D. Vance a "conspiracy theorist," among other characterizations. Whipple's profile showed Wiles was equally blunt about her boss, describing President Donald Trump as having "an alcoholic's personality," a characterization Trump, who does not drink, later echoed himself to another news outlet, saying, "She's right. I do have an obsessive and addictive personality.""
"On Tuesday, Wiles pushed back on X, calling the profile a "disingenuously framed hit piece" and arguing it painted "an overwhelmingly chaotic and negative narrative about the President and our team." Whipple told All Things Considered that Wiles' response stood out precisely because it avoided disputing the substance of the reporting. "Not a single fact in the piece has been contested," Whipple said."
Susie Wiles granted eleven in-depth, on-the-record interviews over a year, providing extraordinary access and revealing blunt, unfiltered assessments of White House colleagues. Wiles said Attorney General Pam Bondi "completely whiffed" on handling the Epstein files and labeled Vice President J.D. Vance a "conspiracy theorist." She described President Donald Trump as having "an alcoholic's personality," which Trump later echoed, calling himself "obsessive and addictive." Wiles publicly called the coverage a "disingenuously framed hit piece" and argued it painted an overwhelmingly chaotic narrative, while not contesting the factual claims presented.
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