"I don't want to overstate this, but he is assassinating the presidency." –@realBobWoodward pic.twitter.com/ZKGTUsjvn3— Morning Joe (@Morning_Joe) September 30, 2020(Tap photo and swipe to view gallery)
10.09.2020 - 17:49 / thewrap.com
attacked veteran journalist Bob Woodward on Wednesday for a new book Trump described as a “political hit job,” once tweeted criticism of his predecessor’s administration for, well, attacking veteran journalist Bob Woodward.“Only the Obama WH can get away with attacking Bob Woodward,” tweeted Trump in 2013, long before he ever ran for president.On Wednesday, after news outlets quoted excerpts from Woodward’s upcoming book “Rage” in which Trump told Woodward on tape that knew the coronavirus was
."I don't want to overstate this, but he is assassinating the presidency." –@realBobWoodward pic.twitter.com/ZKGTUsjvn3— Morning Joe (@Morning_Joe) September 30, 2020(Tap photo and swipe to view gallery)
Bob Woodward's Rage sold more than 600,000 copies in its first week of publication, continuing a yearlong wave of blockbuster books about President Donald Trump. Simon & Schuster announced Wednesday that Woodward's book will be going into its fourth printing, with total books in print to be 1.3 million copies.
affects virtually nobody.” That contradicts what the president told Woodward in February and March of this year, when he said the virus was “deadly” but he was downplaying it to the public. As of Tuesday, there have been 6.8+ million COVID-19 cases and 200,000 deaths in the United States.“The visitation of the medical nightmare on the American population is staggering, stunning.
straight to your inbox Patrice Evra has called on Manchester United's executive vice-chairman Ed Woodward to be more suspicious of people's motives in the transfer window.
downplay the virus.Woodward went on, “It is a monumental, catastrophic leadership failure.”Also Read: Department of Justice Launches Probe Into John Bolton's Trump Tell-All BookThe veteran journalist’s second book about the Trump administration, “Rage,” dropped Tuesday.In the book, Woodward revealed that Trump knew how “deadly” the coronavirus was early on in the crisis, but actively chose to downplay the threat.
In a new audio clip from his interviews with President Donald Trump, Watergate journalist and Rage author Bob Woodward offered more evidence of how the U.S. leader knew about the dangers of the novel coronavirus earlier this year.
Erik Pedersen Managing EditorStephen Colbert got a scoop tonight for his CBS late-night show. Veteran journalist and Rage author Bob Woodward brought along what he calls a “quite revealing” exclusive recording of President Donald Trump from five months ago saying of the coronavirus, “Bob, it’s so easily transmissible, you wouldn’t even believe it.”Woodward tells Colbert and us that the recording was made April 13 during a call made from the Oval Office.
Donald Trump‘s disdain for former President Barack Obama is widely known, and Michael Cohen, Trump’s former fixer, says there’s more to it than just a professional grudge. Cohen, appearing on the September 14 episode of The View, stated that he believes Trump’s problem with Obama is “purely racial.” Likening him to Archie Bunker, the racist character from the 1970s sitcom All in the Family, Cohen told the co-hosts that Trump also had a problem with Obama being “brighter” than him.
Ted Johnson The biggest bombshells in Bob Woodward’s Rage already have been reported, but in his first sit-down interview on 60 Minutes on Sunday, he explained why he decided to make a final judgment in his book about Donald Trump — that he was the “wrong man for the job.”“You’re known as the reporter who doesn’t put his thumb on the scale,” 60 Minutes correspondent Scott Pelley said to Woodward.
During his first official week back in studio, Late Night host Seth Meyers broke down President Donald Trump's latest scandal involving comments to Watergate journalist Bob Woodward. The recently released interviews reveal the president was aware of the severity of the novel coronavirus pandemic in its earliest months and knowingly downplayed it.
learned Wednesday that President Trump admitted to Bob Woodward back in February and March "he purposefully downplayed the risk of coronavirus," Trevor Noah said on Thursday's Daily Show. "Now, when normal people get caught on tape admitting that they lied to an entire country, they usually apologize.
Bruce Haring pmc-editorial-managerPresident Donald Trump is still dealing today with the fallout from his controversial comments recorded by journalist Bob Woodward. Intended for Woodward’s new book, Rage, the remarks have the President admiting he downplayed the seriousness of the coronavirus in order to avoid creating a panic.Despite the uproar from certain quarters on that decision, Trevor Noah doesn’t think that it will have any effect on the Nov.
Celebrities in Hollywood are leading a charge in calling for another impeachment of Donald Trump after excerpts from journalist Bob Woodward’s upcoming book “Rage” contained remarks from the president earlier this year that show him downplaying the threat of the novel coronavirus pandemic in its early stage.
President Donald Trump talked in private about the “deadly” coronavirus last February, even as he was declaring to America it was no worse than the flu and insisting it was under control, according to a new book by journalist Bob Woodward. Trump said Wednesday he was just being a “cheerleader” for the nation and trying to keep everyone calm.
one story is making major headlines today," Jimmy Fallon said on Wednesday's Tonight Show.
UPDATE (9/09/20, 10:34 PM ET): Journalist Bob Woodward is coming out with yet another tell-all book about Donald Trump, after conducting 18 interviews with the POTUS. In a preview for this book called Rage, which will hit bookstands on Sept. 15, Woodward documented startling conversations with Trump about the coronavirus pandemic in 2020.
which make up much of the substance of Woodward’s new book, “Rage”. But Tucker’s target in this rant wasn’t Woodward — it was Republican Sen.