US president Barack Obama has named long-time foreign policy aide Denis McDonough as his new White House chief of staff, tapping a trusted loyalist to help drive his second-term agenda as he unveiled a major overhaul of senior staff.
Mr Obama announced the appointment of Mr McDonough, who had been widely tipped to fill the vacancy created by Jack Lew's nomination as Treasury secretary, at a ceremony in the White House's ornate East Room.
Mr McDonough, a deputy national security adviser, takes on what is a mostly behind-the-scenes job but still considered one of Washington's most influential. The chief of staff acts as Oval Office gatekeeper and is a coordinator of domestic and foreign policymaking.
In more than half a dozen other high-level staff changes, Mr Obama also moved White House communications director Dan Pfeiffer to the job of senior adviser and replaced Mr Pfeiffer with his deputy, Jennifer Palmieri.
Mr Pfeiffer is taking on the new role with Mr Obama's announcement of the expected departure today of senior adviser David Plouffe, a chief architect of the president's 2008 White House victory and his 2012 re-election.
Mr Obama's choice of Mr McDonough - whom the president lauded as "one of my closest and most trusted advisers" - holds to a pattern of picking confidants and allies as he shuffles his inner circle for his second-term.
The 43-eyar-old started out with Mr Obama when he was a freshman US senator from Illinois and just beginning his rapid ascent on the national political scene.
Mr McDonough, whose expertise is mostly in foreign policy, worked on Mr Obama's 2008 presidential campaign and became a senior aide at the National Security Council when the president took office.
"Denis has played a key role in every major national security decision of my presidency: ending the war in Iraq, winding down the war in Afghanistan, and from our response to natural disasters around the world like Haiti and the tsunami in Japan, to the repeal of ‘Don't Ask Don't Tell'," Mr Obama said.
There had been some concern that Mr McDonough's lack of a deep domestic policy background might be a handicap for him as chief of staff when fiscal matters, gun control and immigration are shaping up as Mr Obama's top priorities. Mr Obama has also signalled a possible push in the fight against climate change.
The promotion of Ms Palmieri, who was a staffer in Bill Clinton's White House, marks one of the first second-term appointments of a woman for a senior job as Mr Obama has faced criticism for giving his most recent top nominations to men.
Mr Pfeiffer, a long-time Obama aide, helped shape the president's public relations strategy in his first term and the re-election campaign, and is expected to remain a key tactician.
Another woman named was assistant attorney general for national security Lisa Monaco, who was tapped to replace John Brennan as Mr Obama's chief White House counterterrorism adviser, pending his confirmation as CIA director.
Rob Nabors, White House director of legislative affairs and a negotiator in last year's "fiscal cliff" talks with Congress, was named deputy White House chief of staff for policy. Tony Blinken, vice president Joe Biden's national security adviser, was appointed one of Mr Obama's deputy national security advisers.
Mr McDonough's main competition for the chief of staff job was Ron Klain, former chief of staff to Biden.
The chief of staff job is a high-pressure one, and Mr Obama's has been a through a series of them since taking office.
Rahm Emanuel, now mayor of Chicago, led Obama's White House in the first half of his first term during fights over the economic stimulus package and healthcare reform.
Bill Daley, a commerce secretary under Mr Clinton, served as Mr Obama's second chief of staff, after an interim filled by aide Pete Rouse. Mr Daley was not a part of Mr Obama's campaign-connected inner circle, however, and left after a year in the job.
Reuters