President Donald Trump is considering a broader cabinet shake-up amid growing frustration with political fallout from the ongoing war with Iran, according to multiple sources familiar with internal White House discussions. The potential reshuffling comes as Trump faces politically challenging circumstances: the five-week-old war has driven up gas prices, dragged down his approval ratings, and intensified anxiety about consequences for Republicans heading into November's midterm elections.
Key Takeaways
President Donald Trump is considering a broader cabinet reshuffle as political pressure mounts over the ongoing war in Iran. Key officials like Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick are reportedly at risk amid rising gas prices, declining approval ratings, and concerns about November's midterm elections.
- President Trump weighs potential cabinet shake-up due to Iran war fallout
- Gas prices rise, approval ratings drop as war drags on
- Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick reportedly at risk
- White House insists Trump maintains confidence in both officials
Some allies criticized Trump's televised speech to the nation on Wednesday, describing it as an attempt to project control and confidence that fell flat. The sources did not consistently describe any single cabinet member as certain to lose their job in the near term, but multiple officials are in some degree of danger, they said.
According to Reuters and The Guardian, Trump has privately asked cabinet officials whether he should replace Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard. Sources reported that Trump is frustrated with Gabbard for shielding a former deputy who undercut his rationale for war with Iran. Fox News also noted that Gabbard may have earned Trump's ire by failing to condemn former counterterrorism chief Joe Kent after his abrupt exit from the administration last month.
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick is another potential target, according to Reuters and Fox News. Lutnick has faced renewed scrutiny for his relationship with late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, including a lunch on Epstein's private island in 2012. Despite this, White House officials have insisted that Trump maintains 'total confidence' in both Gabbard and Lutnick.
Trump could ultimately decide not to make any changes to his administration’s senior ranks. Several others close to Trump have said the president is reluctant to overhaul his cabinet too frequently, after recurrent staffing changes during his first term dominated headlines and created the impression of chaos at the White House. One of the White House officials said to expect a “targeted churn,” rather than a “big, dramatic reset.”
Trump worked with his speechwriting team and top advisers on this week’s prime-time address, one official said, after aides had urged him for weeks to speak directly to the nation about the US role in Iran. During the speech, the president declined to lay out an off-ramp for the war, which began on February 28, leaving the impression that the conflict was open-ended.
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