Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition
Scaramucci says Trump is an ‘intentional liar’
Former White House aide Anthony Scaramucci labeled President Donald Trump “an intentional liar” who methodically works to incite opponents and the media, as criticism mounted of Trump’s combative rhetoric after a wave of mail-bomb attempts against prominent Democrats.
“He’s an intentional liar; it’s very different from just being a liar liar,” Scaramucci said Thursday on Bloomberg TV. Scaramucci served briefly as Trump’s communications director in July
2017.
“Yes, the president is speaking mistruths,” Scaramucci said. “Yes, the president is lying. He’s doing it intentionally to incite certain people, which would include left-leaning journalists and most of the leftleaning politicians.”
Critics have argued Trump is at least partly culpable for the bombing attempts because of the hostile political climate he has cultivated in his rhetoric. Suspected explosives were discovered targeting former President Barack Obama, former Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton, CNN and others Trump has frequently vilified in speeches and on Twitter.
Scaramucci, who’s promoting a new book, said answers by the media and Trump’s opponents to the president’s untruthful statements have been ineffectual. They respond like bullied schoolchildren pleading to hall monitors — calling out Trump’s lies, which doesn’t work, he said.
“If someone’s taking your lunch money in the cafeteria, if you call the hall monitor, it’s not going to help you,” Scaramucci said. Instead, “you’ve got to defeat the person at the table with your peer group.”
Scaramucci’s comments were his effort to clean up a blanket assertion he made Wednesday that Trump “is a liar,” something he said on CNN shortly before the first reports of the apparent pipe-bombs sent to Obama and Clinton.
Trump has blamed the news media for encouraging rancor that may have motivated the attacks, and has spent much of the last two weeks stoking fear about a migrant caravan that’s making its way north to the U.S.-Mexico border but is still several hundred miles away.
Scaramucci said Trump and others should tone down their rhetoric about the caravan.
“I think we’ve got to calm ourselves down, we have to dial back and get out a little bit of a decoder,” he said.