At 24 years of age, she scored an entry-level, $25,000-per-year post replying to invitations for the vice president. According to The Times, she left a mound of 13 months-worth of unanswered correspondence addressed to Gore below her desk.
People Magazine reported a former staffer said, “she didn’t do her job, and it got everybody in trouble.”
“She was the worst hire we ever made,” Mary Margaret Overbey, Gore’s former office administrator told The Times.
Manigault was then moved to the Clinton White House to the position of deputy associate director of presidential personnel. She only lasted eight months in that job until she was transferred out of the White House all together to the Commerce Department.
There, Cheryl Shavers, who served as the Department’s undersecretary for technology, described Manigault to The Times as “unqualified and disruptive,” so she “had her removed.” Savers also told People Magazine in 2004 that “One woman wanted to slug her.”
Former VP Al Gore’s Office Couldn’t Wait To Get Rid Of Omarosa, Too
People Magazine reported a former staffer said, “she didn’t do her job, and it got everybody in trouble.”
“She was the worst hire we ever made,” Mary Margaret Overbey, Gore’s former office administrator told The Times.
Manigault was then moved to the Clinton White House to the position of deputy associate director of presidential personnel. She only lasted eight months in that job until she was transferred out of the White House all together to the Commerce Department.
There, Cheryl Shavers, who served as the Department’s undersecretary for technology, described Manigault to The Times as “unqualified and disruptive,” so she “had her removed.” Savers also told People Magazine in 2004 that “One woman wanted to slug her.”
Former VP Al Gore’s Office Couldn’t Wait To Get Rid Of Omarosa, Too