Trump: Comedian who ripped his spokeswoman ‘bombed’
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump gave a thumbs-down Sunday to the comedian who roasted his chief spokeswoman at the annual White House Correspondents’ Association dinner and offended present and past members of Trump’s administration, including one who walked out in protest.
The organization’s leader said she regretted that Michelle Wolf’s routine may end up defining an evening that was designed to rally around journalism.
“Everyone is talking about the fact that the White House Correspondents Dinner was a very big, boring bust ... the so-called comedian really ‘bombed,’ ” Trump tweeted Sunday.
The president, who regularly lobs sharp attacks at the news media, including individual news organizations and reporters, declined to attend the journalism awards dinner for the second consecutive year. He instead held a campaign rally in Michigan.
Wolf is known as a contributor on Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show With Trevor Noah.”
A series of barbs about White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders, who sat just feet away, seemed to spark the most outrage on Saturday night.
Sean Spicer, who preceded Sanders at the White House lectern, tweeted after dinner that the night “was a disgrace.” Others, including Ed Henry, chief national correspondent for Fox News and a former association president, and Comedian Michelle Wolf, center, draws a crowd Saturday night after the White House Correspondents' Dinner. MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” co-host Mika Brzezinski, called on the association to apologize to Sanders. Brzezinski has been the subject of personal attacks by Trump. Henry also called on Wolf to apologize.
Matt Schlapp, chairman of the American Conservative Union, tweeted that he and his wife, Mercedes Schlapp, director of strategic communications at the White House, walked out of the dinner. “Enough of elites mocking all of us,” he said.
Margaret Talev, the association’s president and Bloomberg News’ senior White House correspondent, said she didn’t want a dinner celebrating the constitutional right to free speech to be overshadowed by the ensuing uproar over Wolf’s jokes.
“My only regret is that to some extent those 15 minutes are now defining four hours of what was a really wonderful unifying night and I don’t want the cause of unity to be undercut,” Talev said Sunday on CNN’s “Reliable Sources.”
Talev said she spoke to Sanders after Wolf’s routine and “I told her that I knew that this was a big decision whether or not to attend the dinner, whether to sit at the head table and that I really appreciated her being there.”
No Trump administration officials attended the dinner last year after Trump decided to skip it. Many were in the audience Saturday night, however, i ncluding counselor Kellyanne Conway, herself a target of Wolf, and Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross. Sanders sat at the head table with association board members.
Talev said that, by tradition, the association does not review the comedian’s monologue before it is delivered.
“We don’t censor it. We don’t even see it,” she said.
As he did last year, Trump flew to a Republican-friendly district to rally supporters in an attempt to counter the dinner. He assured the audience in Washington Township, Mich., that he’d rather be there than at “that phony Washington White House Correspondents’ Dinner.”
Wolf’s act, which also included abortion jokes, had some in the audience laughing. Others sat in stony silence.