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Susie Wiles

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American political consultant and lobbyist (born 1957)

Not to be confused withSiouxsie Wiles.
Susie Wiles
Wiles in 2025
32nd White House Chief of Staff
Assumed office
January 20, 2025
PresidentDonald Trump
Deputy
Preceded byJeff Zients
Chief of Staff to theMayor of Jacksonville
In office
November 20, 1997 – November 17, 2000
MayorJohn Delaney
Preceded byRick Mullaney
Succeeded byAudrey McKibbin Moran
Personal details
BornSusan L. Summerall
(1957-05-14)May 14, 1957 (age 68)
Political partyRepublican
Spouse
Lanny Wiles
(m. 1984; div. 2017)
Children2
Parent
EducationUniversity of Maryland, College Park (BA)

Susan L. Wiles (née Summerall; born May 14, 1957) is an American government official, political consultant, and lobbyist, who has served as the 32ndWhite House chief of staff since January 2025. She is the first woman to hold the position.

Wiles graduated from theUniversity of Maryland, College Park, in 1978. While attending university, she began working forNew York representativeJack Kemp. Wiles later worked forRonald Reagan's1980 presidential campaign in his scheduling office, in theWhite House Office of Scheduling and Advance, and forRaymond J. Donovan, thesecretary of labor. In 1985, she moved toPonte Vedra Beach, Florida, with her husband and two children. Wiles served as the district director forTillie Fowler's 1992 campaign to representFlorida's fourth congressional district. She worked within the administration ofJacksonville mayorJohn Delaney and served as his chief of staff from 1997 to 2000. Wiles later served inJohn Peyton's administration, but quit to work as a spokeswoman and lobbyist.

In the2010 Florida gubernatorial election, Wiles worked asRick Scott's campaign manager. After Scott's victory, she served asJon Huntsman Jr.'s campaign manager forhis presidential campaign, though she resigned after less than a month amid a dispute withJohn Weaver. In October 2015, Wiles was hired as a Florida campaign chairwoman forDonald Trump's2016 presidential campaign. She became his campaign manager for Florida in September 2016. After Trump won that year'spresidential election, Wiles moved toWashington, D.C., to leadBallard Partners withBrian Ballard. In September 2018, she was hired to leadRon DeSantis's campaign for the2018 Florida gubernatorial election. By the following year, a feud between Wiles and DeSantis allies, including his wife,Casey, led to her removal[when?] from Trump's2020 campaign. She left Ballard Partners that year.

Wiles rejoined the Trump campaign in July 2020. After Trump's loss in the2020 presidential election, she was appointed to lead Trump's fundraising apparatus, includingSave America. She assumed a dominant role in Trump's post-presidential activities, including his travel, fundraising, and endorsements in the2022 elections. After Trump announceda third consecutive presidential campaign in November 2022, Wiles was named as his campaign manager alongsideChris LaCivita. After his victory in the2024 election, Trump named Wiles as his White House chief of staff.

Early life and education (1957–1978)

[edit]

Susan L. Summerall[1] was born on May 14, 1957,[2][3] inLake City, Florida.[3] She was the first child ofPat Summerall[4] and Katharine Jacobs.[5][6][a] Pat was a professional football player before becoming a televisionsportscaster in 1962.[7] After the1958 NFL season, the Summeralls returned to Lake City.[8] They moved tothe Bronx the following year for the1959 season,[9] living temporarily in theConcourse Plaza Hotel.[3] Pat suffered from alcoholism; in an interview with theArkansas Democrat-Gazette in 2010, he stated that his drinking problems began after he retired following the1961 season and started working forCBS Sports.[10]

The Summeralls lived inConnecticut for three years before moving into a large home inSaddle River, New Jersey, in July 1967.[5] In his autobiographySummerall: On and Off the Air (2006), Pat stated that Katharine "raised our children virtually on her own" and that he had "failed them as a father in the most critical years" in favor of his sports career.[11] Summerall played basketball and tennis, as well as ran track and field.[6] She was a member of theGirl Scouts of the USA troop that her mother ran.[5] Summerall is anEpiscopalian.[6] She graduated from theAcademy of the Holy Angels inDemarest, New Jersey, in 1975[1] and from theUniversity of Maryland, College Park in 1978.[12]

Career

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Staff assistant (1978–1984)

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In May 1978, Summerall began working forNew York representativeJack Kemp as a receptionist[13][14] and later an aide,[15] from her father's connection to him;[12] Pat and Kemp had played for theNew York Giants in 1958.[16] She continued to work for him by the following April.[17] Summerall worked forRonald Reagan's1980 presidential campaign in his scheduling office.[4] By May 1981, she had worked in theWhite House Office of Scheduling and Advance.[18] By 1984,[3] she married Lanny Wiles, whom she had met while working for Reagan's campaign.[4] They had two children before divorcing in 2017.[19] In one of her final assignments, Susie helped Reagan prepare for a ten-day trip toEurope in June 1982.[4] By then, she had become a personal secretary forRaymond J. Donovan, thesecretary of labor.[20] She left her position by 1984.[12]

Early campaign, staff, and public relations management (1992–2015)

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The Wileses moved toPonte Vedra Beach[12] in 1985.[21] That year, Wiles worked for the Jacksonville Chamber of Commerce and ledJacksonville mayorJake Godbold's public relations team. After the birth of her second child, she went on sabbatical.[12] By 1988, she had been living inArcadia, where she was a member of theFlorida Chamber of Commerce ofDeSoto County and received an honor for co-leading the organization's women's forums that year.[22] Wiles returned to work that year as the head of campaign scheduling and advance work forDan Quayle. In May 1991, the Wileses filed for federal bankruptcy protection after a failed hotel development deal inNorth Carolina indebted Lanny. She served as the district director forTillie Fowler's 1992 campaign to representFlorida's fourth congressional district. After the campaign, she ran Fowler's local offices.[12]

In 1995, Wiles began working asJacksonville mayorJohn Delaney's director of communications and intergovernmental affairs.[12] In April 1996, Wiles became his deputy chief of staff,[23] and in November 1997,[24] she became the city's first female chief of staff.[6] Wiles was key to theBetter Jacksonville Plan and was the point person on the Preservation Project.[25] Her tenure was marked by concerns that she had controlled the flow of information reaching Delaney.[12] Wiles resigned in November 2000 to enter the private sector.[25] She toldThe Florida Times-Union that her exit would allow her to spend more time with her family and to leave a "high-pressure job".[25] Wiles became the chief operating officer of The Vestcor Companies the following month,[26] but left after less than a month.[27] In February 2001, she became a vice president atAPCO Worldwide, a public affairs firm.[27]

By March 2003, she had become a spokeswoman forMike Weinstein,[28] and later forJohn Peyton, Delaney's eventual successor.[29] She began serving as Peyton chief of special initiatives and communications in August.[30] Wiles oversaw Peyton's key initiatives, including early literacy, restoring theSt. Johns River, and an anti-crime program. In June 2008, she stepped down to spend time with her family and travel.[31] By February 2009, Wiles had worked forRepublic Services; concurrently, Peyton sought aUS$750 million proposal forWaste Management to continue operating Jacksonville's landfill. She resigned from her position in response to a request from Peyton.[32] In October, Wiles joined IF Marketing & Advertising, a marketing firm founded by formerJacksonville Jaguars playerTony Boselli that was set to open an office in Jacksonville.[33] Additionally, Boselli and Wiles ranBallard Partners's Jacksonville office by July 2011.[34] She assisted in Mullaney's mayoral campaign for the2011 election.[35]

In April 2010,Rick Scott announced that he would run forgovernor of Florida in that year'sgubernatorial election. Wiles joined Scott's campaign a week later as his campaign manager.[35] After Scott's victory in November, she served as his transition legislative liaison.[36] After Scott's inauguration in January 2011, Wiles led apolitical action committee in advance of formerUtah governorJon Huntsman Jr.'s possible presidential campaign.[37] In June, Huntsman named Wiles as the national campaign manager forhis 2012 campaign.[38] The following month, she left Huntsman's struggling[39] campaign, telling theMiami Herald that "it was just time".[40] Wiles's decision was viewed byThe New York Times as "the first serious sign of concern" for the campaign.[41] According toPolitico,John Weaver, a strategist for Huntsman, had an internal feud with Wiles and forced her ouster.[42] Wiles later supported formerMassachusetts governorMitt Romney inhis presidential campaign, becoming a co-chair of his Florida advisory council in December.[43] She served as the interim director of theJacksonville Civic Council from February[44] to September 2013.[45] Wiles was a senior advisor to mayorLenny Curry[46] and served as his initial policy director.[47] She lobbied for the tobacco companySwisher.[48]

Trump and DeSantis campaigns (2015–2021)

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In October 2015, Wiles was named as aFlorida campaign chairwoman forDonald Trump's2016 presidential campaign alongsideJoe Gruters.[49] According to theTampa Bay Times,Brian D. Ballard introduced Wiles to Trump, who was delighted that Wiles's father wasPat Summerall.[50] Her role was described byThe New York Times as "pivotal" in connecting Trump with local activists and political figures.[51] She was named as a delegate for Florida at the2016 Republican National Convention in May 2016.[52] Wiles became Trump's Florida campaign manager after he removed Karen Giorno—who had clashed with Trump campaign officials[53]—in September.[54] Her strategy involved incorporating Trump's bombastic style with theRepublican National Committee's ground operations,[55] though the campaign's own ground game in Florida suffered from funding issues.[56] According toConfidence Man (2022), amid polls showingHillary Clinton beating Trump in Florida, Trump berated Wiles over his performance in the state and an advertisement that was aired without her consent.[57] In the weeks leading up tothe election, she pushed for anabsentee ballot program. Trump laterwon the state and the election.[58] Inhis report, special counselRobert Mueller detailedRussian interference in the election, particularly in Florida, where Russian nationals misled Trump officials into appearing at rallies they held and funded. Wiles toldPolitico that campaign staff were unaware of Russian operatives.[59] Concurrently, she worked for Ballard Partners.[60]

Following Trump'sfirst inauguration in January 2017, Wiles joined Ballard in his eponymous firm'sWashington, D.C. office.[61] That year, she divorced from Lanny.[6] In September 2018, former representativeRon DeSantis appointed Wiles as the chair of his faltering gubernatorial campaign in the2018 election.[62] DeSantis's decision was indicative of Trump's influence on the election[63] and shifted negative attention away from the campaign,[64] improving DeSantis's polling numbers.[65] Wiles led DeSantis's transition efforts, including hiring his chief of staff,Shane Strum.[66] She left the DeSantis campaign to handle theRepublican Party's operations in Florida, setting off a feud between her and Strum.[67] State Republicans, led by Strum and first ladyCasey DeSantis, sought to oust associates of Wiles within the party, leading to Ron distancing himself from the party apparatus.[68] In September 2019, a leaked internal memorandum detailing how DeSantis's political team could charge lobbyists for access intensified the conflict, with close advisors to Ron accusing Wiles of leaking the document.[69] Trump's2020 campaign severed ties with Wiles at Ron's behest, according toPolitico.[70]The New York Times later reported that the move, though agreed to by Trump and the campaign managerBrad Parscale, infuriated several Trump advisors who believed that Wiles would be able to win the state.[71] That day, Wiles toldFlorida Politics that she had left Ballard Partners, citing health reasons.[72]

Campaign manager and advisor to Trump (2021–2024)

[edit]

Amid polls showingJoe Biden beating Trump in Florida, advisors urged Trump to rehire Wiles. According toPolitico, Trump brought up bringing her back to DeSantis in a call from theOval Office; Trump purportedly recalled that "Ron lost his shit."[73] By June 2020, Trump was considering rehiring Wiles.[74] The following month, she returned to the Trump campaign as an unpaid advisor to organizers of theRepublican National Convention. In apparent response, DeSantis directed his fundraiser, Heather Barker, to tell donors that they should not donate to the convention.[75] Wiles was among several Florida Republicans advocating for Trump to nominateBarbara Lagoa to theSupreme Court following thedeath of Ruth Bader Ginsburg.[76] Wiles's influence in the Trump campaign increased in the months leading up tothe election, withDavid Bossie tasked with separating her from DeSantis and her suggestions to win Florida being implemented.[77] In March 2021, following his loss, Trump named Wiles to lead his fundraising operations, includingSave America, a political action committee. Wiles asked Trump to only cover her travel expenses.[78] By June, her role had diminished as he relocated tohis golf club inBedminster, New Jersey.[79] InVirginia, Wiles was credited withGlenn Youngkin's victory in that year'sgubernatorial election by strategic distancing Youngkin from Trump.[80]Jeff Roe, a political consultant, toldPolitico Magazine that he "worked with Susie Wiles the whole way through."[81] She joined Mercury Public Affairs as a co-chair of global public strategy in February 2022.[82]

Wiles managed much of Trump's post-presidential activities, including his travel, fundraising, and endorsements for the2022 elections.[78] She established a vetting process for endorsements[83] that involved polling and field research,[84] though she also worked to influence Trump's recommendations.[85] Leading up to the2022 Senate election in Arizona, Wiles andPeter Thiel advocated forBlake Masters in the Republican primary.[85] At Wiles's suggestion,Chris Kise joined Trump's legal team to represent him in theclassified documents case.[86] She led a successful effort to eliminateLiz Cheney, a representative who opposed Trump, in that year's Republican primary forWyoming's at-large district.[87] In November, Trump announced that he was running in the 2024 election.His campaign opted to divide the campaign manager role between Wiles andChris LaCivita, a political consultant.[88]The New York Times referred to Wiles as "perhaps the most significant voice" within Trump's campaign.[89] She privately supportedRonna McDaniel's successful fourth campaign forchair of the Republican National Committee[90] and informally advisedDaniel Davis in his campaign in the2023 Jacksonville mayoral election.[91] As Trump'slegal issues mounted throughout 2023, Wiles was responsible for paying lawyers[92] and for ensuring delegates will be loyal to Trump.[93] According toABC News, Trump showed Wiles—who was unnamed in the classified documents indictment—a map of an "ongoing military operation".[94]

White House Chief of Staff (2025–present)

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Wiles andDonald Trump in theOval Office in November 2024
Wiles (left) and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff GeneralDan Caine in theSituation Room duringOperation Midnight Hammer in June 2025

Following Donald Trump's victory in the2024 presidential election, Wiles was expected to be named as hisWhite House chief of staff, though Trump had consideredBrooke Rollins, a figure distrusted by many of Trump's advisors.[95] The day after Trump was declared the victor, he named her as his chief of staff, the first woman to hold the post.[96] According toThe New York Times, Wiles did not dissociate from Mercury Public Affairs until Trump's announcement.[48] Wiles tentatively established a staff structure in which thePresidential Personnel Office would serve beneath the Office of Cabinet Affairs, set to be managed byTaylor Budowich.[97] In December, Trump replacedBill McGinley, who was set to assume the position ofWhite House counsel, withDavid Warrington, a choice Wiles preferred.[98] That month, Debra OConnell, the president of ABC News, dined with Wiles; the dinner occurred days before the network announced it would settle a lawsuit with Trump over on-air statements made byGeorge Stephanopoulos.[99]

Wiles was involved in negotiating the prisoner exchange between the Russian entrepreneurAlexander Vinnik and the American schoolteacherMarc Fogel in February 2025.[100] That month, Trump fired the board of theJohn F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and named Wiles, among other loyalists, to the board.[101] She was named inAssociated Press v. Budowich (2025), a lawsuit filed by theAssociated Press against Trump officials who blocked the news agency from press events and locations over its stance on theGulf of Mexico naming controversy; Wiles had emailed the Associated Press, alleging that the apparent influence ofits stylebook had been "misused, and at times weaponized, to push a divisive and partisan agenda."[102] According toPolitico, Wiles and her deputy chiefs of staff were unaware of and infuriated by an email sent by theDepartment of Government Efficiency later that month requiring federal employees list five accomplishments in the prior week;Elon Musk, an advisor to Trump, asserted onX that failing to respond to the email would be grounds for termination.[103] In May,The Wall Street Journal reported that a federal investigation into an effort to impersonate Wiles had been initiated. Wiles told associates that the contacts list on her personal phone had been hacked.[104] The following month, theJournal reported that Vice PresidentJD Vance and Wiles had urged Musk to reconcile his differences with Trump after the two menpublicly feuded.[105]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Pat and Kathy had two children after Wiles: Jay (born 1958/1959) and Kyle (born 1962/1963).[5]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"Holy Angels graduates class of 152 students". The Sunday News.
  2. ^Fineout, Dixon & Dobrin 2019.
  3. ^abcdBumiller 2025.
  4. ^abcdDart & Alexander 1983.
  5. ^abcdKukla 1968.
  6. ^abcdeKruse 2024.
  7. ^Goldstein 2013.
  8. ^Summerall 2006, p. 71.
  9. ^Summerall 2006, p. 73.
  10. ^Halpern 2010.
  11. ^Summerall 2006, p. 164.
  12. ^abcdefghNord 1996.
  13. ^"Payroll Figures Reported For Area Congressman". The Buffalo News.
  14. ^Husar 1978.
  15. ^Crawford 1978.
  16. ^Summerall 2006, p. 75.
  17. ^"WNY Representatives Report Staff Salaries at End of 1978". The Buffalo News.
  18. ^"Reagan turns down Harvard, Tufts invitations". Anchorage Times.
  19. ^Bloch 2024.
  20. ^Perlez 1982.
  21. ^Smith 2016.
  22. ^Stein 1988.
  23. ^Roman 1996.
  24. ^Stobbe 1997.
  25. ^abcDeCamp & Patterson 2000.
  26. ^Daniels 2000.
  27. ^abPinzur 2001.
  28. ^"Glover offers workforce plan". The Florida Times-Union.
  29. ^"Peyton moves in, brings flag along". The Florida Times-Union.
  30. ^Palka 2003.
  31. ^Palka 2008.
  32. ^Mitchell 2009.
  33. ^"Boselli marketing firm opens Jacksonville site". The Florida Times-Union.
  34. ^Dixon 2011.
  35. ^abHunt 2010.
  36. ^Gibbons 2010.
  37. ^Martin & Burns 2011.
  38. ^Bennett 2011.
  39. ^Blake 2011.
  40. ^Caputo 2011.
  41. ^Shear & Zeleny 2011.
  42. ^Martin 2011a.
  43. ^Martin 2011b.
  44. ^Bauerlein 2013a.
  45. ^Bauerlein 2013b.
  46. ^Monroe 2015b.
  47. ^Monroe 2015a.
  48. ^abKelly & Vogel 2024.
  49. ^Schreckinger 2015.
  50. ^Leary 2017.
  51. ^Haberman 2016.
  52. ^Dixon 2016a.
  53. ^Isenstadt & Debenedetti 2016.
  54. ^Caputo 2016a.
  55. ^Caputo 2016b.
  56. ^Gabriel 2016.
  57. ^Haberman 2022, p. 249–250.
  58. ^Caputo & Cheney 2016.
  59. ^Dixon & Caputo 2018.
  60. ^Dixon 2016b.
  61. ^Caputo 2017.
  62. ^Bousquet & Mahoney 2018.
  63. ^Isenstadt 2018.
  64. ^Thrush & Stack 2018.
  65. ^Mahoney 2018.
  66. ^Caputo, Dixon & Dobrin 2018.
  67. ^Dixon 2019a.
  68. ^Dixon 2019b.
  69. ^Caputo, Dixon & Isenstadt 2019.
  70. ^Isenstadt & Dixon 2019.
  71. ^Haberman 2019.
  72. ^Schorsch 2019.
  73. ^Fineout & Caputo 2020.
  74. ^Kumar 2020.
  75. ^Karni & Mazzei 2020.
  76. ^Fineout, Caputo & Dixon 2020.
  77. ^Isenstadt 2020.
  78. ^abOrr & Contorno 2022.
  79. ^Bennett & Orr 2021.
  80. ^Goldmacher 2021.
  81. ^Lizza 2021.
  82. ^Schorsch 2022.
  83. ^Allen & Caputo 2022.
  84. ^Orr 2022.
  85. ^abPalmeri 2022.
  86. ^Helderman et al. 2022.
  87. ^Isenstadt 2022.
  88. ^Haberman, Goldmacher & Bender 2022.
  89. ^Flegenheimer, Haberman & Bender 2023.
  90. ^Allison 2023.
  91. ^Fineout 2023.
  92. ^Feuer, Haberman & Protess 2023.
  93. ^Epstein et al. 2023.
  94. ^Feuer & Haberman 2023.
  95. ^Haberman & Swan 2024a.
  96. ^Haberman & Swan 2024b.
  97. ^Haberman & Swan 2024c.
  98. ^Haberman 2024.
  99. ^Grynbaum & Feuer 2024.
  100. ^Troianovski et al. 2025.
  101. ^Hernández & Pogrebin 2025.
  102. ^Robertson 2025.
  103. ^Traylor & Burns 2025.
  104. ^Dawsey 2025.
  105. ^Andrews, Schwartz & Mattioli 2025.

Works cited

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Books

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Articles

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External links

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2025–present
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