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Showing posts with label Omarosa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Omarosa. Show all posts

"I wouldn't vote for him again in a million years" Emotional Omarosa slams Trump on Celebrity Big Brother

During the 2016 US election, Omarosa Manigault-Newman was among those at the forefront campaigning for Donald Trump. She recently got fired and promised to tell all when the time was right. It seems the time has come because she's talking already.

The former White House adviser is now starring in the reality show 'Celebrity Big Brother' and since this season of the show debuted on Wednesday, Omarosa has been making some revelations. The former 'Apprentice' star was in tears as she made shocking remarks about President Trump to her housemates.

She told her fellow housemates that she "would never vote for him again in a million years." The former self-proclaimed "Trumplican"-turned-Trump-hater was heard telling fellow Celebrity Big Brother housemate, Keshia Knight Pulliam - who played the lovable Rudy on the hit family sitcom 'The Cosby Show' - that Pulliam's relationship to Bill Cosby is similar to her and Trump's.
Omarosa told Pulliam: "Only you know your interwork and relationship to Mr Cosby. That's the same thing with me and Mr Trump."
The former political aide said: "It's not something that can be minimized."
Pulliam replied: "It's comparing apples to oranges."
Omarosa continued: "but you don't see the similarities?"
And Pulliam agreed, saying: "It's a different situation because this man is running our country and being a voice of a whole country of people."
The ex-communications director for the administration's Office of Public Liaison later says that with Trump at the helm, America "is going to not be okay. It's not... It's so bad."





"I wouldn

Omarosa's anti-Trump rant further included a claim that she "was haunted by tweets every single day, like, 'What is he going to tweet next?' ". With hushed tones, she said that she did her best to be a voice of reason, advising Trump that his take-no-prisoners social media style wasn't helping him. 
"I tried to be that person, and then all of the people around him attacked me," she added, singling out Ivanka Trump and her husband, Jared Kushner, for the blame.
"It was like, 'Keep her away. Don't give her access. Don't let her talk to him.' And it's like, Ivanka's there, Jared's there."

"I wouldn

When asked if there's anyone left at the White House who has the power to intervene, she shrugged.
Omarosa said: "I don't know. I'm not there. It's not my circus, not my monkeys. I'd like to say 'not my problem,' but I can't say that."
Omarosa was fired from her White House job in December.















Omarosa appears on 'Celebrity Big Brother': says "Trump tweets haunted me, had to 'serve' my country"


Ex-White House staffer and full-time drama queen Omarosa Manigault Newman – back in her reality TV element – tearfully confessed Thursday to being “haunted” by President Trump’s daily tweets, accused his inner circle of keeping her at arm’s length and described her selfless service to the country.
“I felt like it was a call of duty,” she told her “Big Brother: Celebrity Edition” co-star Ross Matthews, in an episode airing Thursday. “I felt like I was serving my country, not serving him.”




Manigault Newman, the self-proclaimed “queen of the boardroom,” and Matthews are among the 11 celebrities who have moved into the Big Brother house to compete for a $250,000 grand prize.
The CBS reality show is Manigault Newman’s first job since leaving the White House in December. Manigault Newman worked as an assistant to the president and director of communications for the White House Office of Public Liaison.
“I was haunted by tweets every single day,” she whisper-cried to Matthews. “What is he going to tweet next?”
Matthews asked, “Does anybody say to him, ‘What are you doing?’”
She replied, “Honey, I tried to be that person and then all of the people around him attacked me. It was like ‘keep her away,’ ‘don’t give her access,’ ‘don’t let her talk to him.’ It’s like, Ivanka’s there, Jared’s there.”
She then told a wide-eyed Matthews, “It’s not my circus. It’s not my monkeys. You know, I’d like to say, not my problem, but I can't say that because it’s bad.”
When Matthews asked if people should be worried, Manigault Newman nodded her head.
Matthews said: “Don’t say that.”
During the season premiere of the show Wednesday night, Manigault Newman reminisced about her time as a member of Team Trump.
“There’s a lot of people that want to stab me in the back, kind of similar to the White House,” she said. “The one thing I learned from politics is you have to watch your back, and sometimes you have to watch your front too.”
Immediately following their first meeting, Matthews, an E! correspondent, said he was having trouble dealing with Manigault Newman’s “toxicity and negativity.”
Late Thursday, the White House weighed in on Manigault Newman's comments.
"Omarosa was fired three times on 'The Apprentice' and this is the fourth time we let her go," White House Deputy Press Secretary Raj Shah said. "She had limited contact with the president while she was here. She has no contact now."















Bizarre film of Omarosa surfaces amid White House exit



As Omarosa Manigault Newman exits her job at the White House, a bizarre video showing her less, er, stateswomanly side has emerged.

A pop-culture polymath sent Page Six a link to “Soul Sistahs,” an ultra-camp, hyper-kitsch, uber-low-budget 10-minute sci-fi short film.

While the plot is virtually incomprehensible, as far as we can tell it focuses on an intergalactic yenta in a housecoat who kidnaps Omarosa in an attempt to steal Donald Trump's hair as part of a difficult-to-understand get-rich-quick scheme.

The mini-flick was made back in 2006 — two years after Omarosa shot to fame on Trump’s NBC show “The Apprentice.”

In this vaguely “Barbarella”-inspired work, the aging villain drugs Omarosa by feeding her spiked cake, whereupon the red PVC-clad former director of communications for the Office of Public Liaison goes off on a motorcycle to steal the future president’s hair in a showdown on top of a CGI-created Trump Tower.

Click here for more from The New York Post.
















John Kelly Making Move To Push Out Omarosa for ‘Triggering’ Trump

Newly minted White House chief of staff John Kelly has sought to put a dent in the influence of one of President Donald Trump’s most famous advisers: Omarosa Manigault.
The former Apprentice co-star—who currently serves as the communications director for the Office of Public Liaison—has seen her direct access to the president limited since Kelly took the top White House job in late July, sources tell The Daily Beast. In particular, Kelly has taken steps to prevent her and other senior staffers from getting unvetted news articles on the president’s Resolute desk—a key method for influencing the president’s thinking, and one that Manigualt used to rile up Trump about internal White House drama.

Multiple sources in and outside the Trump White House told The Daily Beast that, until recently, it was common practice for aides to slide into the Oval Office and distract and infuriate the president with pieces of negative news coverage. Manigault, they say, was one of the worst offenders.
“When Gen. Kelly is talking about clamping down on access to the Oval, she’s patient zero,” a source close to the Trump administration said.
The stories Manigault would present to Trump, often on a phone or printed out, would often enrage the president, and resulted in him spending at least the rest of the day fuming about it. For example, one White House source noted that Manigault was one of the people who would bring to President Trump’s attention online articles concerning MSNBC hosts, and former Trump pals, Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski “slagging him, and his administration.”
This contributed, at least in small part, to the president’s mounting rage against the MSNBC couple, which exploded in late June when Trump attacked them and tweeted that, among other things, Brzezinski “was bleeding badly from a face-lift.”

Manigault earned a reputation within the White House for this kind of stuff, and, to many of her colleagues, it quickly overshadowed her comms duties and pro-Trump outreach to African-American audiences.
Kelly “is not thrilled by any means by [Manigault],” a West Wing official told The Daily Beast. “He is, however, thrilled that he has been able to stop staffers including Omarosa from bolting into the Oval Office and triggering the president with White House [palace] intrigue stories.”
One of Kelly’s first organizational changes upon taking the chief of staff job was to strictly limit and vet the information that aides put before the president during official work hours, according to a pair of internal memos first reported by Politico. Kelly also imposed new restrictions on what used to be very lax Oval Office walk-in privileges for senior staff. The free flow of information and casual pop-ins during the day had become a means for officials to enlist the president in their preferred policy initiatives, damage the standing of White House rivals in the president’s eyes, or nudge Trump toward a particular attitude or mood.
Of particular concern for Kelly were stories from conspiratorial right-wing websites that occasionally whipped Trump into a frenzy over issues such as the West Wing’s press leak problem. In Manigault’s case, sources said, the stories generally originated at more obscure, gossipy websites, and concerned White House palace intrigue, media personalities, or prominent Republicans in Congress.
Ever since Kelly instituted the new regime, Trump’s former reality-TV co-star’s capacity to influence her boss during the work day has taken a hit.
“She’s not happy about it,” another White House source said. “She has a bond that goes back years with [Trump] and resents being cut off like everyone has.”
To be sure, the president still uses his private cellphone to speak with and solicit advice from a small inner circle of longtime aides and friends, Manigault among them. Though Kelly has sought to limit and streamline the pipeline of information into the Oval Office, there’s not much he can do about the president’s penchant for calling up his closest advisers, even at odd hours, once his staffers depart for the evening.
As Kelly has clamped down on the information that reaches the president through official channels, Trump’s inner circle has increasingly reverted to phone calls with the president directly. The sense is that Kelly is essentially powerless to block Trump off from a coterie of friends and allies that predate the White House by years.
Manigault’s loyalty to Trump is not driven by ideology or politics nearly as much as it is by their longstanding personal relationship. Her executive-branch experience dates back to the 1990s, when she had a brief stint in the Clinton administration. That job didn’t last long, as she was reportedly a nightmare to work with, to the point that at least one female colleague wanted to inflict physical violence on her. And before becoming a top Trump campaign surrogate and joining his Republican administration, Manigault was a big fan of Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton.
Manigault’s passionate defense of Trump has sometimes escalated into her threatening people with supposed enemies lists, including one incident where she reportedly told a reporter that she was among several journalists on whom White House officials kept “dossiers” of dirt.
“It’s so great our enemies are making themselves clear so that when we get into the White House, we know where we stand,” she had previously told IJR at Trump’s election-night celebration. “Let me just tell you, Mr. Trump has a long memory and we’re keeping a list.”
The White House did not respond to a request for comment, and Manigault declined to comment on this story. Officials spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not cleared to talk about Omarosa.
Kelly is not the first to attempt to limit access by some of Trump’s longtime confidants, including Manigault. His predecessor, former chief of staff Reince Priebus, tried to restructure West Wing meetings in May to cut down on the number of aides with direct access to Trump in those settings.
The New York Times reported at the time that Priebus had sought to exclude Manigault in particular from as many meetings as possible.
But Priebus mostly failed to meaningfully limit the steady flow of information to the president. The optimism aides expressed at the time about his effort to restructure internal White House operations could be warning for Kelly, who is attempting to succeed where Priebus failed.
“The trains are now running on time,” Trump’s friend and confidant Tom Barrack boasted to the Times of White House restructuring efforts in May. Two months later, Priebus was out of a job after routine public humiliation inflicted and sanctioned by Trump himself.
Manigault was never much of a Reince loyalist, either, even before he attempted to sideline her.
Two sources told The Daily Beast that during the earliest days of the Trump White House’s brief Anthony Scaramucci era—a relentlessly chaotic 10 days that kicked off with an attempted Scaramucci-led purge—Manigault was among the several Trump allies who sent in a list—yet another one of her stated lists—of people she thought Trump should fire. Her list skewed heavily toward establishment Republicans.
Priebus was among the “RNC guys” on that list, according to one source with direct knowledge.













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