White House Communications Director Alyssa Farah has resigned after 3½ years in the administration, The Washington Post reported Thursday.
The Daily Caller reported that the White House confirmed Farah's resignation.
Farah began in the White House in 2017 as press secretary to Vice President Mike Pence, then moved to the Pentagon, before becoming White House Communications Director in April.
"It's been the honor of a lifetime to serve in the Trump Administration over the last three and a half years, first as Press Secretary to Vice President Pence, then as Press Secretary for the Department of Defense, and most recently as White House Communications Director," Farah said in a statement. "I am deeply proud of the incredible things we were able to accomplish to make our country stronger, safer, and more secure.
"Under this Administration, the ISIS caliphate was destroyed, American hostages were returned home, NATO is stronger than ever, we’ve brokered historic Middle East peace deals, and I was on the ground in Kabul for the announcement of a historic peace deal between the Afghan Government and the Taliban aimed at ending America’s longest war," she said. "We delivered historic tax cuts, putting money back into the pockets of hard working Americans. We rebuilt the judiciary with Constitution abiding independent jurists and we worked to create the most inclusive economy in American history – that gives every citizen a real chance to achieve the American dream."
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