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Pompeo jokes Trump may fire him in a tweet as rumors swirl about his departure

Alex Lockie   

Pompeo jokes Trump may fire him in a tweet as rumors swirl about his departure
Defense2 min read

mike pompeo

Press Information Department Handout/Reuters

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

  • Secretary of State Mike Pompeo joked Monday that President Donald Trump may fire him via tweet.
  • That's exactly what happened to Trump's last secretary of state.
  • Pompeo ruled out running for Senate from Kansas in 2020, but he kept his options open.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo made a joke on Monday that may hit a bit close to home as rumors swirl about his political future outside President Donald Trump's administration.

Pompeo, in his home state of Kansas for the Global Entrepreneurship Summit on Monday, addressed rumors that he may run for Senate after current Kansas Sen. Pat Roberts said he wouldn't seek reelection in 2020.

"I'll be there until he tweets me out of the office," Pompeo said of his role at the State Department, according to Voice of America's Nike Ching.

While Pompeo appeared to be joking, he described exactly what happened to his predecessor, Rex Tillerson.

Mike Pompeo

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Pompeo at a welcome ceremony with is wife, Susan Pompeo, in the lobby of State Department headquarters in Washington, May 1, 2018.

Tillerson, who had no political experience before joining the Trump administration as the nation's top diplomat, had a rocky tenure as Secretary of State, including reports he called Trump a moron.

After NBC reported Tillerson's supposed quip, Trump challenged him to take an IQ test. Tillerson would later hold a press conference in which he directly described Trump as "smart."

Six months later, Tillerson was fired via tweet.

Pompeo, a former senator from Kansas who served as CIA director before taking over the State Department, told The Kansas City Star on Sunday he wouldn't abandon his current post to run for office in 2020 but didn't rule out future runs.

"I try to just avoid ruling things out when there's others who are in control," Pompeo said. "The Lord will get me to the right place."

Fred Berry, Pompeo's former campaign cochair, told the paper that Pompeo has strong chances.

"It's a terrible quandary because he may well be the strongest and most capable cabinet member Trump has," Berry said, adding, "He won't be there forever."

Since taking his post at State, Pompeo has promised to bring the department's "swagger" back and taken shots at Tillerson's isolated leadership style while delivering a refined version of Trump's "America First" vision to allies.

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