Former White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney resigns from position as special envoy
Former White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney has resigned from his position as U.S. special envoy to Northern Ireland, telling CNBC during an interview Thursday morning he called Secretary of State Mike Pompeo Wednesday night with the news.
“I can't do it. I can't stay,” Mulvaney said. “It's a nothing thing. It doesn't affect the outcome. It doesn't affect the transition. But it's what I've got, right, and it's a position I really enjoy doing. But you can't do it. And I wouldn't be surprised to see more of my friends resign over the course of the next 24 to 48 hours."
Asked if, in retrospect, he considered himself an enabler of Trump, he said “it’s a fair question.”
“The answer is I don't know what I feel yet, entirely. I can tell you this, there are, most of us, almost all of us, except I guess the people who are on the inner circle right now who didn't sign up for what you saw last night.”

He said all of Trump’s “successes” -- “all of that went away yesterday, and I think you’re right to ask the question as to how did it happen.”
Mulvaney went on to say the issue now is that Trump’s inner circle consists of people like trade adviser Peter Navarro and personal attorney Rudy Giuliani.
“Clearly he is not the same as he was eight months ago, and certainly the people advising him are not the same as they were eight months ago, and that leads to a dangerous sort of combination as you saw yesterday," he said. "I imagine a lot of folks in the building, a lot of folks who served him from the beginning who are no longer in the beginning, are asking the same things this morning."
-ABC News' Ben Gittleson









