Different day, but the same tough times at Uber. Uber President Jeff Jones has quit, Recode reported Sunday. The decision to leave directly relates to Uber's last two months of PR hell, anonymous sources told Recode.

Uber PR provided this statement: “We want to thank Jeff for his six months at the company and wish him all the best.”

But the communications representative declined to elaborate more on the record about Jones's decision to leave. The departure was effective immediately, and it seems to be that Uber has yet to decide who will take on the responsibilities.

Not long after, what appears to be a company message from Kalanick to employees addressing the matter appeared on Twitter:

Travis Kalanick's email to employees about President Jeff Jones's sudden departure pic.twitter.com/VuHovwixUb — Eric Newcomer (@EricNewcomer) March 19, 2017

The straw that broke the camel's back, according to Recode, was CEO Travis Kalanick announcing his decision to hire a chief operating officer to help him put the ride-hailing giant back on track. It wasn't that Uber was looking hire another No. 2, according to these sources; instead, it seems to be the fact that a COO was necessary at all.

Jones worked as the chief marketing officer for Target before joining Uber in September 2016. Jones had replaced Ryan Graves, the former CEO of Uber who Kalanick replaced in 2010. Graves, who now serves as head of operations, has reportedly been absent at Uber since the crisis.

Unfortunately for Uber, the day was not done. The man leading its maps project is also following Jones out the door, the New York Times reported late Sunday. The exit of Brian McClendon, who previously worked on maps at Google, was however "in the works for some time."

He will be staying on as advisor at Uber, he told the Times in a statement, and will be returning to his home state of Kansas to become involved in politics.

Shortly after the post from Recode went live, Graves retweeted a tweet from The Huffington Post founder Arianna Huffington with lessons on being busy.

Image: twitter screenshot

Huffington is a member of Uber's board, and Kalanick recently appointed her to conduct an internal review for the company in the wake of recent scandals over the treatment of Uber's female employees.

All of which is to say: Clearly, Graves will be busier than ever before.

Previously, in the madness that is #DeleteUber:

And after Jones, it's hard to imagine there won't be more to come soon.

At SXSW last week, we asked a bunch of tech celebrities who would be the best for the COO role. One person suggested Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg. Another suggested Peter Thiel (though he's quite busy with Trump). Jeff Wilson, CEO of Kasita, offered up a creative suggestion: Jared of HBO's Silicon Valley fame.

This story was updated with a statement from Uber.

UPDATE: March 20, 2017, 4:05 p.m. AEDT Updated with details of Brian McClendon's exit.