White House communications director Anthony Scaramucci speaks to members of the media outside the White House in Washington, July 25, 2017. Credit:AP Michael Short, an assistant press secretary who had been close to Mr Spicer, resigned just hours after Mr Scaramucci had been quoted in a news report Tuesday saying he would be fired. The White House confirmed the move in a terse news release, saying that Ms Sanders had accepted Mr Short's resignation and that officials were "grateful for Michael's service and wish him well in his future endeavors." His departure marked another setback for Reince Priebus, the White House chief of staff and former chairman of the Republican National Committee, who populated the West Wing with a group of former RNC aides loyal to him. Those affiliated with the establishment forces of the party are often viewed with suspicion by others in Mr Trump's inner circle. Both Mr Priebus and Mr Spicer had argued forcefully against bringing on Mr Scaramucci, whose hiring seemed to signal a pivot by the White House toward surrounding Mr Trump with people more likely to stick by the campaign coda of "let Trump be Trump." Increasingly toxic atmosphere

White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders Credit:Bloomberg On Tuesday evening, Mr Trump was joined on Air Force One by two former campaign hands, Corey Lewandowski and David Bossie, who travelled with him to Youngstown, Ohio, for a campaign rally. Mr Trump has long been suspicious, by contrast, of the party committee hires, whose personal loyalty he has repeatedly questioned. The White House's new communications director Anthony Scaramucci speaks to members of the media, July 25, 2017. Credit:AP For his part, Mr Short's standing with the president and his inner circle never fully recovered from the hit it took in October, when he visibly and abruptly departed Trump Tower after the emergence of the "Access Hollywood" tape in which Mr Trump had been captured in 2005 speaking in vulgar terms about grabbing women's genitals without their consent. And some in the White House had long believed that Mr Short was the source of unflattering leaks about the president and the inner workings of the West Wing.

The targeting of Mr Short– coupled with Mr Trump's increasingly bitter public feud with his attorney general, Jeff Sessions, one of his earliest and most loyal campaign supporters– put staff aides throughout the White House on edge Tuesday, with several expressing concern about their jobs and lamenting an increasingly toxic atmosphere. Sean Spicer resigned on Friday. Credit:AP The dysfunctional dynamic was on display in the Rose Garden Tuesday during a news conference Mr Trump held with Prime Minister Saad Hariri of Lebanon. Rather than taking a seat among the senior staff who attended, Mr Spicer, who spent much of the day in his office with the door closed, emerged suddenly in the White House colonnade to give reporters updates on when the news conference would begin. As soon as it did, he stood off to one side watching the proceedings next to a line of hedges, like a wedding planner who was dropped before the big event and nonetheless showed up to watch it unfold. Mr Scaramucci did not attend. The way in which Mr Short's sudden departure played out also highlighted the level of chaos– especially as Mr Scaramucci is not yet a White House employee and therefore does not have the power to fire anyone.

After he spoke publicly of firing Mr Short, there was a brief attempt to involve the White House Counsel's Office, which plays a role whenever a White House employee is terminated, according to a person familiar with the matter who insisted on anonymity. But the issue was soon moot, as Mr Short tendered his resignation. Plagued with leaks Mr Trump has been plagued since taking office by a leaky White House, where warring factions of aides and advisers have routinely litigated their internal disputes in the press, leading to unflattering disclosures about senior members of Mr Trump's team and the president himself. Mr Scaramucci's threats appeared intended to reassure Mr Trump that he would do something to solve the problem, although there is little evidence that the deep rifts within his inner circle have been resolved. Mr Scaramucci conceded that the leaking was not confined to the communications operation. "There are leakers in the comms shop, there are leakers everywhere," he said, calling the practice atrocious, outrageous and unpatriotic. "It damages the president personally, it damages the institution of the presidency, and I don't like it."

Behind the scenes, Scaramucci has struck a gentler tone, telling colleagues in a meeting Monday that their contributions were appreciated and he wanted everyone to work together to improve how the White House functioned. But he presented few details about his plans for changes in the coming days. On Tuesday, he told reporters he would apply the no-leaks policy in the future, forgiving past unauthorised disclosures as long as the practice ceased. "If they don't stop leaking, I'm going to put them out on Pennsylvania Avenue," Mr Scaramucci said, gesturing at the street outside the White House gates with his eyes shielded from the sun by blue-tinted aviator sunglasses. "Do you want to sell postcards to the tourists outside the gate, or do you want to work in the West Wing. What do you want to do?" Yet what prompted his broadside against leaks was a question from a reporter about the fate of Mr Short, whom Mr Scaramucci himself had told Politico earlier on Tuesday was to be dismissed. "Let's say I'm firing Michael Short today," he said when asked about the story, hours before Mr Short quit. "The fact that you guys know about it before he does really upsets me as a human being and as a Roman Catholic. I should have the opportunity, if I need to let somebody go, to let the person go in a very humane, dignified way."

The New York Times