Originally published Friday, February 26, 2010 at 8:05 PM
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White House social secretary Desiree Rogers to step down
White House social secretary Desiree Rogers is stepping down three months after an uninvited couple crashed the Obama administration's first...
The Associated Press
CHARLES DHARAPAK / AP
FILE — In this April 13,2009 file photo, President Barack Obama walks with White House Social Secretary Desiree Rogers at the White House Easter Egg Roll on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington. Rogers will step down as White House social secretary next month, a White House aide says. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak, File) WX102
WASHINGTON — White House social secretary Desiree Rogers is stepping down three months after an uninvited couple crashed the Obama administration's first state dinner and she was heavily criticized for her role in allowing the episode to happen.
President Obama and first lady Michelle Obama issued a statement Friday thanking their longtime friend from Chicago for the "terrific job she's done" organizing more than 330 events in little more than a year in the post.
They indicated no reason for the departure, effective next month.
White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said Rogers was neither forced out nor asked to leave. He also said he didn't think the dust-up over the state dinner factored into her decision.
"She's decided it's time to go back to doing other things that she loves," Gibbs said.
Rogers' handling of the Nov. 24 state dinner came under fire after a celebrity-seeking Northern Virginia couple got into the exclusive affair without a formal invitation, despite heavy White House security. As social secretary, Rogers was in charge of the event.
It was a huge embarrassment for the Obama administration that Tareq and Michaele Salahi got into the dinner uninvited, let alone close enough to top officials to shake hands with Obama in the receiving line and take photos with Vice President Joseph Biden, which the Salahis posted on Facebook.
Rogers later acknowledged not having staff from her office at security checkpoints to help identify guests, a departure from the practice in previous administrations. Lawmakers had demanded that she testify about her handling of the event, and one lawmaker wanted to subpoena her. The administration did not allow her to testify, citing the constitutional separation of powers.
Secret Service Director Mark Sullivan told Congress that normal security protocols were not followed, and three officers were put on administrative leave after the breach in what normally is tight White House security.
Obama said weeks later that he was unhappy with everyone involved in what he described as a "screw-up" and said it would not happen again. Mrs. Obama also was said to be angry about the incident. The administration reviewed its policies and decided to station staff at its security checkpoints to help clear up discrepancies about guests.
Rogers also was criticized for having a profile higher than the social secretaries before her. She gave interviews, appeared in glossy magazine photo spreads and dressed in high-end designer labels. She also had a front-row seat next to Vogue Editor-In-Chief Anna Wintour during New York Fashion Week last year.
Rogers, 50, told the Chicago Sun-Times on Friday that she was leaving because she had achieved a major goal of the Obamas: turning the White House into the "people's house" by opening it up to many of those who normally do not get to visit.
"My work was really to create this framework. I think I completed that work," she told her hometown newspaper.
She said she planned to explore opportunities in the corporate world, where she worked before joining the administration. She arrived in Chicago after getting an MBA and has worked at AT&T and a gas and utilities company.
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