Every Presidency.epub | The Gatekeepers- How The White House Chiefs Of Staff Define

It will change the way you watch the news. You’ll stop looking at the person behind the Resolute Desk. You’ll start looking at the person standing by the door.

But the real villain of the book is a different trait: the "Yes Man." When a Chief of Staff is unwilling to tell the President hard truths—that he’s wrong, that the polling is bad, that a strategy is failing—the office collapses. A President without a truth-teller isn't a leader; he's just a guy with a phone. Reading The Gatekeepers today feels eerily prescient. As we look at the current political landscape, Whipple’s central question remains unanswered: Can the system work if the person at the top doesn't want to be managed? It will change the way you watch the news

The book proves that the best Presidents (Reagan, Eisenhower, even Clinton) wanted a strong Chief. They understood that the Chief’s job is to be the "son of a bitch" who fires people, cuts off access, and says "no" to Congress so the President doesn't have to. But the real villain of the book is

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