Nearly six years ago, the famed US Olympian spoke publicly for the first time about being a transgender woman in an
interview with ABC's Diane Sawyer, in which she also discussed being a Republican. Jenner
voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 election and told
E! in a 2016 interview that Trump "would be very good for women's issues."
However, Jenner began
criticizing the former President after his administration announced policies that rolled back some protections for the transgender community. In 2018, about a year after Jenner had visited the White House to meet with administration officials, the White House announced a ban on most transgender people serving in the military, following Trump's tweet on the topic.
"He's not been doing a very good job, but it's not over yet," Jenner told
Variety in an interview at the time. But later that year,
Jenner said she had made a "mistake" in thinking she could work with Trump to benefit the LGBTQ community and was no longer a supporter.
Parscale was lauded by Trump and his allies as a digital guru who helped secure Trump's first election effort. He worked for the Trump family years before Trump launched a presidential bid and he ascended to a role leading the campaign's data analytics team in June 2016. Until he worked on the Trump campaign beginning in 2015, the digital media expert had never worked in politics.
After Trump won the presidency in 2016, Parscale worked with America First Policies, a pro-Trump political organization, and became campaign manager in February 2018.
Parscale was demoted last summer after a Trump rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and
stepped down from his role as a senior adviser to the campaign in September, two sources close to the campaign confirmed to CNN at the time. Three days earlier he had been
detained by police and hospitalized over suicidal threats he had made at his home while holding a gun.