Ex-White House chief of staff said former President Donald Trump won't run in 2024 because he can't

2 years ago
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Andrew Harrer-Pool/Getty Images White House head of staff John Kelly tunes in as U.S. President Donald Trump talks at a preparation with senior military forerunners in the Cabinet Room of the White House on October 5, 2017.

Former White House Chief of Staff John
Kelly is incredulous that Donald Trump will run in 2024.

But the previous president keeps on alluding to a potential second run for the White House.

"He won't run," Kelly told The Atlantic. "Furthermore the explanation is he essentially can't be viewed as a loser."

As previous President Donald Trump continues

To bother a mission to get back to the White

House, a portion of his previous partners are skeptical

That he will enter the official race come

2024.

John Kelly, Trump's longest-serving White House head of staff, communicated questions that the previous president will make a run for the chief seat again in a meeting with The Atlantic distributed Tuesday.

Kelly let The Atlantic know that he presumes Trump will keep on inferring a potential run paving the way to crusading season, however eventually, will neglect to follow through.
"Trump will not run," Kelly told the distribution. "He'll keep discussing it; he might even announce, yet he won't run. Also the explanation is he just can't be viewed as a loser."
A agent for the Trump Organization didn't promptly react to Insider's solicitation for comment.

After going out in 2019, Kelly seldom reprimanded the previous president in the rest of Trump's time in office. In any case, the resigned Marine Corps general has since communicated analysis of Trump
Following the January 6 Capitol attack.

Kelly told ABC News reporter Jonathan Karl that assuming Trump "was a genuine man, he would go down to the Capitol and advise them to quit," alluding to the horde of agitators who penetrated the Capitol almost one year prior. His remarks were remembered for Karl's book, "Disloyalty: The Final Act of the Trump Show," which was delivered recently and subtleties the last turbulent year of Trump's presidency.

Trump stood out as truly newsworthy last end of the week when he by and by alluded to a 2024 run.

"I think assuming that I run, I'll get it," he said in a Fox Business meet. "See, I have a 94, 95% even, in the CPAC, I had a 98% endorsement rating. So in case I choose to run, I'll get it very easily."

"Most individuals have said assuming I run, they will not run against me, so I feel that is great," he added.

Trump's 2020 misfortune to President Joe Biden by almost 7 million votes incited the former
President to provide reason to feel ambiguous about his loss by making a few lawful endeavors to upset the misfortune, all of which have failed.
Former partners of Trump appear to trust that that misfortune and the chance of another - - could hold Trump back from attempting again.

Former National Security Advisor John Bolton and Trump's previous legal counselor Michael Cohen have made comparative expectations to Kelly, featuring the previous president's abhorrence for rout following the 2020 election.
"I think he knows somewhere inside, in spite of the fact that he won't ever let it out, he lost in 2020 and especially fears losing in 2024 since, supposing that he loathes anything on earth, he despises being known as a failure," Bolton said last month.

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