White House counselor Kellyanne Conway said Thursday that White House press secretary Sean Spicer has the 'full confidence' of President Donald Trump even as she admitted the White House was seeking 'additional help' in the communications area.

She talked up Spicer – who holds the title of both press secretary and communications director – in an interview on Fox News after the administration has stumbled in its initial weeks both on policy rollouts and communications.

'The truth is Sean Spicer is our Press Secretary and will continue to be,' Conway said on 'Fox and Friends.'

'He has the President's ear and his full confidence,' she continued. 'I’m in there every day meeting with them on any range of issues before Sean’s press briefing and we have a communications director in Sean Spicer also. I mean this man has been doing two jobs,' she explained.

White House counselor Kellyanne Conway pushed back on reports that President Trump is displeased with White House press secretary Sean Spicer, saying Spicer has the president's 'full confidence'

'He has the President's ear and his full confidence,' Conway said of White House press secretary Sean Spicer, who began his tenure by tearing into reporters

'I think he is doing an excellent job, frankly, as both,' she said, providing her own endorsement of Spicer's performance. 'But if we can get additional help for communications, I think that would alleviate some of the idea that this man is doing two jobs.'

'But he’s got the full faith and confidence of the President,' she said.

Then she blasted reports to the contrary as 'completely false.'

'I have talked to the President, I’ve talked to Sean Spicer and they’re just false,' she said.

CNN reported on Tuesday that President Trump 'is disappointed in Spicer's performance during the first two weeks of the administration,' citing a source familiar with internal communications.'

Politico reported that White House chief of staff Reince Priebus is having difficulty filling the communications director post, and that two people had turned it down.

The article noted the travails during the campaign of officials charged with coordinating the message delivery by campaign surrogates for Trump – in party due to Trump's heavy hand in steering his own messaging.

“That is completely false, also' Conway said, pushing back on such reports.

'I know people who are interested in the job, actually, as I stand here. They’ve reached out to us and I think that we'll be either interviewing or deciding what to do in that regard.'

'But, look, I think communications is important to any President of the United States – that’s as an obvious point. But to this President, it's exceptionally important, because is he a TV expert himself. He had the number one show on NBC when the apprentice came out. He is - I have been in the room with him many times when he is about to do a TV hit or record something at length and he knows right away the camera angles and the visuals. I mean that’s who he is,' she said.

Spicer began his tenure by lacing into reports on his first full day in the job over reports about crowd sizes at the inauguration.

He has made some stumbles since, including citing a nonexistent terror attack in Atlanta three times in the past two weeks, ultimately claiming on Thursday that he 'clearly meant Orlando.'

The president is reportedly furious that Saturday Night Live had a woman play the press secretary and feels that it makes him look feeble.

Trump was uncharacteristically silent about this past weekend's show, having repeatedly attacked the program in the past on Twitter for Alec Baldwin's impression of him.

According to insiders, this is a sign of how uncomfortable Trump is with the merciless lampooning of Spicer by McCarthy who played him as unhinged and easily rattled.

Politico reported White House insiders have said they worry now for Spicer's 'longevity' in the image conscious world of the Trump White House.