www.cnn.com/2017/11/26/politics/hope-hicks-donald-trump-white-house
Nov 26, 2017 · It took
Hope Hicks seven years to go from college graduate to White House communications director.
Hope Hicks
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Early life and education
Hicks is the daughter of Caye Ann (Cavender) Hicks and Paul Burton Hicks III.
[7] Her father was Regional CEO, Americas
[8] of
Ogilvy Public Relations Worldwide, and executive vice president of communications for the
National Football League from 2010 to 2015, before his current position of managing director of the
Glover Park Group.
[9][10][11][12][13] She grew up in Greenwich, Connecticut.
[14][15][16]
Hicks was a teenage model, including for a
Ralph Lauren campaign, with her older sister Mary Grace and was the face of the
Hourglass Adventures novels about a time-traveling 10-year-old.
[4] She was the cover model for
The It Girl (2005), the first novel in the series by
Cecily von Ziegesar.
[17]
She attended
Greenwich High School, where she was co-captain of the
lacrosse team, and graduated in 2006.
[14][18][19] She attended
Southern Methodist University, where she majored in English and played on a club lacrosse program she helped start. She graduated in 2010.
[14][4][20]
Career
Hicks started in
public relations with the New York City firm, Zeno Group.
[21]
Hicks began working for public relations firm
Hiltzik Strategies in 2012, after meeting the firm's founder at an NFL
Super Bowl event, working for among others its client
Ivanka Trump, Donald Trump's daughter, on her fashion line, and then on other Trump ventures.
[14][1]
In August 2014 she joined
The Trump Organization full-time.
[9] Hicks worked for Ivanka Trump inside
Trump Tower, helping expand her fashion label (the Ivanka Trump Collection) and modeling for her online store.
[22] In October 2014 she began working directly for Donald Trump.
[23]
In January 2015, Donald Trump earmarked Hicks, who was 26 years old at the time, for the role of
press secretary for his potential presidential campaign.
[24][25]
Donald Trump summoned her to his office and, as she tells it, "Mr.
Trump looked at me and said, 'I'm thinking about running for president,
and you're going to be my press secretary.'"
[22] Until that time, she had never worked in politics, nor volunteered on a campaign.
[26]
After Trump's first primary victories, Hicks was asked to choose
between staying with the Trump Organization or working on the campaign
full time. She initially decided to leave the campaign, but Trump
convinced her to remain and she stayed on as press secretary.
[14]
During the campaign, she played the role of gatekeeper to press
members who wanted to speak with Trump, handling over 250 requests a
day, and deciding which reporters would be allowed to speak with him.
[15][26] Hicks also took dictation from Trump for his
tweets,
and then sent the text to another person in the Trump organization who
actually sent out the tweets from Trump's official account.
[22][27]
When in New York City, she would spend most of her day sitting in
Trump's office, handling inquiries from the press and taking dictation
from him to tweet.
[28] The demands of the campaign took a personal toll, as they caused a breakup between Hicks and her boyfriend of six years.
[15]
On December 22, 2016, it was announced that Hicks would become part
of the Trump Administration, in the newly created position of the
White House Director of Strategic Communications. In January 2017, Hicks was included on the
Forbes 30 Under 30 list, having "served as a one-woman press team for Trump's historic presidential campaign."
[6]
In May 2017, in response to an article in
The Washington Post that said that Trump had a habit of belittling those who work for him, Hicks issued the following statement:
President Trump has a magnetic personality and exudes positive
energy, which is infectious to those around him. He has an unparalleled
ability to communicate with people .... He has built great relationships
throughout his life and treats everyone with respect. He is brilliant
with a great sense of humor ... and an amazing ability to make people
feel special and aspire to be more than even they thought possible.[29]
On August 16, 2017, she was made the interim
White House Communications Director (the last Director having been
Anthony Scaramucci).
Politico
labelled her the "Untouchable Hope Hicks," as she was considered one of
the few White House officials whose job was safe, and she was one of
only two White House communications officials who Scaramucci had
announced were definitely staying when he was first hired.
[30] She was appointed permanent White House Communications Director on September 12, 2017.
[31]
Personal life
Hicks
and her sister lived in Greenwich, but she splits her time between an
apartment there and rent-free in a Trump-owned apartment in Manhattan.
When Trump was elected, she moved to Washington, D.C.
[19][26][28] Her father is a managing director at the
Glover Park Group.
[10]
References
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