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Former White House Press SecretarySarah Huckabee Sanders, who left her job with PresidentDonald Trumpthis summer, will join Fox News as a contributor starting next month.

The network announced Thursday that it had hired Sanders, 37, who will “provide political commentary and analysis” on Fox News as well as Fox Business Network, the streaming service Fox Nation and Fox News’ digital and radio platforms.

“I am beyond proud to join their incredible stable of on-air contributors in providing political insights and analysis,” Sanders, the daughter of former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, said in a statement.

Such transitionsfrom politics to cable newsare far from unusual. Former officials in PresidentBarack Obama‘s administration such as David Axelrod and Jay Carney later took jobs on CNN, for example, as did former Trump campaign official Jason Miller was an MSNBC contributor.

Former Fox News contributors have gone on to join Trump’s government — such as Heather Nauert, who became a State Department spokeswoman, and John Bolton, now the national security adviser — and the reverse: Hope Hicks, a longtime Trump aide who served as communications director in the White House, now heads communications for Fox News’ parent company.

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Sarah Huckabee Sanders

Like many of the Trump White House’s most visible officials, Sanders regularly faced criticism that she was a mouthpiece for the president’slong history of lies, misstatements and exaggerations. In what she described as a “slip of the tongue” earlier this year, Sandersdid not tell the truth when she claimed in 2017that “countless” FBI agents were happy about Trump’s decision to fire FBI Director James Comey. Her false statement came to light as part of Robert Mueller’sRussia investigation.

Her relationship with the press was also controversial at a time when President Trump routinely dismissed negative or investigative coverage of him as anti-American.

Though she was known as a helpful resource for individual reporters in private, Sanders essentially ended the White House’s daily briefing with news media, where government officials could explain their work to the public, and often tangled with the press on camera.

After Sanders announced earlier this year that she would leave the White House, Trump said, “She’s done an incredible job. We’ve been through a lot together. She’s tough but she’s good.”

source: people.com