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Hope Hicks named permanent White House communications director

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Hope Hicks, who was named interim White House communications director in August, will now hold the job on a permanent basis, a White House spokesperson told CNN Tuesday.

Hicks, a longtime aide to President Donald Trump who was one of the first staffers to join Trump's 2016 campaign, became the interim communications director after Anthony Scaramucci, the colorful and controversial Trump aide, was ousted from the job in July.

Bloomberg earlier reported the development.

 

Hicks' relationship with Trump began while she was working for Hiltzik Strategies, a New York public relations firm founded by Matthew Hiltzik, a longtime Hillary Clinton supporter. She went on to leave the firm to work for the Trump Organization on several projects, including Ivanka Trump's fashion line.

That work grew into a close relationship with the businessman-turned-politician, making Hicks one of the few White House aides who has avoided the infighting that has largely defined Trump's presidency.

Hicks, 28, had not moved into the office designated for the White House communications director, instead opting to remain at her current desk just outside the Oval Office.

The White House has struggled to fill the communications director position ever since Trump was elected in November.

Jason Miller, a campaign spokesperson, declined the job in December, citing family reasons. Mike Dubke, the administration's first full-time communications director, resigned in May. And Sean Spicer, the former White House press secretary who filled in as communications director when the role was open, resigned in July.