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Top Biden aides to leave the White House for campaign leadership roles

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WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden’s campaign is shaking up its senior leadership, having Jennifer O’Malley Dillon and Mike Donilon move from their roles in the White House to top jobs for his re-election bid, according to campaign officials.

In the coming weeks as the campaign shifts to a general election posture, the anticipated staff moves will have Donilon playing a central role in the campaign’s messaging and paid media strategy, and O’Malley Dillon in the organizing and execution of the campaign’s path to 270 electoral votes — all under the leadership of campaign manager Julie Chavez Rodriguez, the officials said.

In an interview Tuesday night, Chavez Rodriguez said that she’s “excited to have an all-hands-on-deck approach with colleagues that we know have been critical Biden advisers and were on the 2020 campaign.”

She added that the campaign has a clear focus on “what it is that we need to do between now and when it is official who our opponent is going to be.”

“All of that work is well under way and will continue at the clip that we need it to,” Chavez Rodriguez told NBC News.

Chavez Rodriguez earlier praised Donilon and O’Malley Dillon in a statement, saying, “we’re thrilled to have their leadership and strategic prowess focused full-time” on sending Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris back to the White House for a second term.

O’Malley Dillon’s new role was going to be the plan down the road and it was just accelerated now due to the shrinking GOP field, a source said. The president still has confidence in Chavez Rodriguez, the source said.

O’Malley Dillon’s move was first reported by The New York Times.

Jim Messina, who was campaign manager for President Barack Obama’s re-election campaign in 2012, called the campaign staff additions a “smart move.”

“This is a smart move by President Biden and Julie — having additional top political aides focus full-time on the re-elect is exactly what you’d expect the White House to do as the general election matchup comes into focus,” Messina said in a statement.

Maria Cardona, a senior adviser to the Democratic National Committee, said in a statement that the moves were a “critical and standard one — to bring trusted and effective leaders onto the campaign ahead of the election as Julie commandeers the troops to victory in November.”

O’Malley Dillon’s shift to Biden’s re-election campaign was made in part, two sources familiar with the decision said, because former President Donald Trump had consolidated support in the Republican Party faster than anticipated.

O’Malley Dillon was Biden’s campaign manager in 2020. She has been deputy chief of staff at the White House since Biden became president.

Donilon was a chief strategist for Biden’s 2020 campaign and has served as an adviser to the president since he took office in 2021.

Chavez Rodriguez has been campaign manager since last year.

The shakeup comes after Tump prevailed in last week’s Iowa caucuses with a resounding victory, prompting Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy to end their White House bids and endorse the former president. Former U.N. ambassador Nikki Haley is now Trump’s chief GOP rival as he seeks the Republican nomination.

Trump has already secured the backing of a majority of Senate Republicans.

Results from this month’s NBC News/Des Moines Register/Mediacom poll in Iowa found that three-quarters of likely Republican caucusgoers think Trump can prevail over Biden despite the former president’s legal hurdles.

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