Even before Trump left the hospital, Vice President Mike Pence had lined up a full week of travel and in-person campaigning. On Monday, he left for Utah to prepare for Wednesday’s vice presidential debate. And on Thursday, he’s scheduled to hold a MAGA rally in Arizona before heading to Indiana to cast his ballot ahead of the election.
For Troye, the approach mirrors her experience working in the West Wing during the pandemic, with aides clustered together during meetings.
“We had known exposures on the staff, or from when people were on the road, and those people who had been exposed to Covid were still coming into work because they were told to,” Troye said. “Some of these junior staffers were scared. I feel badly for them. We all have families, parents and grandparents.”
Of course, not all Trump staffers leave on a bitter note — far from it. Numerous high-profile aides have turned into high-profile cheerleaders after departing, describing their time with Trump in exclusively glowing terms. Former White House press secretary Sarah Sanders, for example, even wrote a book lauding the leadership she saw from Trump during her time in the White House. On Monday, she said during a Fox News interview that Trump’s approach to his coronavirus recovery would give him a chance “to talk about all the things his administration has done” on combating the pandemic more broadly.
Still, Trump’s quick dispatch of aides and allies has been evident since the 2016 campaign, when he left in his wake a slew of former top aides, military officers and associates, many of whom had their reputations damaged by working for him.
His former personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, served jail time for following Trump’s orders to illegally pay off a porn star alleging an affair with Trump during the campaign.