Who Is Deputy Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders — and Where Is Sean Spicer?

Sean Spicer may have been the face of the Trump administration for its first month, but in the past two weeks, we’ve been seeing less of him and more of his deputy — Sarah Huckabee.

If her name sounds familiar, there’s a reason: She’s the only daughter of former two-time Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee. Sanders has worked on multiple campaigns in the past, including as the national political director for her father in 2008, and as his campaign manager in 2016.

“He’s an amazing politician, but an even better parent,” Sanders told Time of her father. “Every day he challenges me to be a better person and I will forever be grateful for that.”

After Huckabee’s campaign came to an end, she joined now-President Donald Trump‘s campaign as a senior adviser, eventually gaining the deputy press secretary position in his White House.

And as Spicer has been notably absent on-camera for the past two weeks, Sanders has played a larger and larger role representing the administration to the media.

In particular, her rise in air time came just after Trump tweeted that while he was president, Barack Obama’s administration wire tapped Trump’s phones during the presidential election. Trump offered no evidence for these claims, which he spoke of as facts, and the FBI even asked the Justice Department to refute Trump’s allegations. A spokesperson for Obama also denied the allegations. (For the record, Obama seems unfazed.)

But this weekend, it fell to Sanders to defend Trump’s tweets and a call for an investigation into the alleged wiretapping. During on-camera appearances as a White House spokesperson, Sanders handled this task of offering an explanation to Trump’s tweets — but it hasn’t gone well.

On Sunday, she sat down for an interview with Martha Raddatz, ABC News’s Chief Global Affairs Correspondent. In the interview, Sanders says that Trump simply wants to find if there was evidence of wire tapping by the Obama administration — which Raddatz then says is inaccurate, as Trump stated that Obama engaged in wire tapping as fact.

Sanders spoke in the hypotheticals, saying that if Trump’s claims are true (which, in his tweet, he refers to as facts) are true, that it is “the largest abuse of power that we’ve ever seen.” She also compared the “need” for investigation into the wire tapping to the alleged Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election, which has dominated headlines for weeks. Watch the full interview below.

The difficulties continued on Monday, when Sanders sat down with George Stephanopoulos on Good Morning America. She was rebuked by Stephanopoulos for making false or inaccurate claims several times during the interview.

As Sanders takes to the news to defend Trump’s wire tapping claims, there’s an obvious question: What happened to Sean Spicer? Trump’s now-notorious press secretary shot to fame in the early weeks of his presidency, even earning himself a parody on Saturday Night Live, courtesy of Melissa McCarthy.

However, reports have surfaced in the New York Times that Trump is none too pleased with Spicer — a claim that lent credence to Spicer’s sudden disappearance. Spicer, the former communications director of the Republican National Committee, is undeniably a Washington insider–the kind of person Trump said he didn’t want in his administration throughout his campaign of “drain the swamp” rhetoric.

During the first weekend of Trump’s presidency, Spicer held a soon-to-be controversial first press briefing, in which he falsely claimed that Trump’s inauguration was the best-attended in history.

Just last week, the hosts of Fox & Friends asked Trump to give himself a grade on the job he’s done so far while in office. By his standards, he’s earned an A+ for effort, an A for achievement, but just a C or C+ in terms of messaging, saying bluntly that it “isn’t good.”

That blame falls more on the shoulders of the administration’s chief messenger, Spicer, than on Trump himself. Trump also said that he would have “handled” the search for leakers in his department differently than Spicer did — Politico reported that Spicer asked communications staffers to turn over their phones And according to The New York Times, the negative coverage Trump has received is causing him “a lot of angst,” Christopher Ruddy, a longtime Trump pal says.

Trump has taken his message into his own hands on a few occasions throughout his presidency so far, with his 77-minute press conference, and of course, his Twitter updates.