Donald Trump’s niece Mary reveals she heard her uncle use the n-word and anti-Semitic slurs
Donald Trump’s niece Mary says she heard her uncle use the n-word and anti-Semitic slurs and says it ‘should be no surprise considering how racist he is today’
- Mary Trump said of her family it was ‘normal to hear them use the n-word or use anti-Semitic expressions’, and she told MSNBC she heard POTUS use the slurs
- The niece of President Trump, Mary is promoting her a new book, ‘Too Much and Never Enough: How My Family Created the World’s Most Dangerous Man’
- She said her uncle is ‘clearly racist,’ which was part of his upbringing
- But Mary Trump said the president also engages in racism ‘to score him points with the only people who are continuing to support him’
By Lauren Fruen and Nikki Schwab, Senior U.s. Political Editor In Des Moines
Published: 19:15 EDT, 16 July 2020 | Updated: 02:16 EDT, 17 July 2020
Mary Trump, the niece of President Trump, has said she heard her uncle use the n-word and anti-Semitic slurs.
Speaking to Rachel Maddow on MSNBC she said: ‘Of course I did. And I don’t think that should surprise anybody given how virulently racist he is today.’
Mary Trump had earlier said in a new interview about her blockbuster book that her family engaged in casual bigotry throughout her childhood.
‘Growing up, it was sort of normal to hear them use the n-word or use anti-Semitic expressions,’ she told The Washington Post. She said the president is ‘clearly racist,’ which is a product of his upbringing and also politically motivated.
Pressed by Maddow if she had heard the president use the n-word and anti-Semitic slurs Mary Trump replied: ‘Yes.’
The White House has called Mary’s allegations ‘a book of falsehoods’, adding: ‘The president doesn’t use those words.’
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Mary Trump, the niece of President Trump, has said in an interview with Rachel Maddow on MSNBC she heard her uncle use the n-word and anti-Semitic slurs
Mary Trump said President Trump (pictured) is ‘clearly racist,’ which she said was part of his upbringing, but he also uses racism politically ‘to score him points with the only people who are continuing to support him’
Mary Trump’s book ‘Too Much and Never Enough: How My Family Created the World’s Most Dangerous Man’ came out Tuesday and is already a bestseller
She told The Post that she hasn’t been surprised by the president’s racist language nor policies, including separating children from their parents at the southern border.
‘No, the more divisive the better, the cooler,’ she said.
‘It comes easily to him and he thinks it’s going to score him points with the only people who are continuing to support him,’ Mary Trump said.
She described what her family engaged in as ‘a knee-jerk anti-Semitism, a knee-jerk racism.’
‘Homophobia was never an issue because nobody ever talked about gay people, well, until my grandmother called Elton John’ an anti-gay slur,’ she also told The Post.
That anecdote was one of many memorable moments in Mary Trump’s new book, ‘Too Much and Never Enough: How My Family Created the World’s Most Dangerous Man.’
In the book, she describes her grandmother Mary calling the choice to have John sing at the funeral of Princess Diana ‘a disgrace’ and said he was a ‘little’ six-letter slur.
She said that led to her decision not to come out to her family.
Mary Trump was secretly engaged to a woman, but had to push back her wedding because her grandfather, Fred Trump Sr., had died.
In the book, Mary Trump recalls her grandfather Fred Trump Sr. (left) using phrases like ‘Jew me down,’ and said her grandmother, also named Mary (right), called Elton John an anti-gay slur
Mary Trump writes in the book about her father Freddy Trump (center) joining a historically Jewish fraternity and wonders if he did so as a ‘conscious rebuke’ to Fred Trump Sr.’s anti-semitism. Pictured are all five Trump children: Robert, Elizabeth, Freddy, Donald and Maryanne
She recounts her grandfather using terms like ‘Jew me down.’
She said her father, Freddy Trump, who died at age 43 in 1981 after suffering from alcoholism, joined the historically Jewish fraternity Sigma Alpha Mu as a young man, and pondered in the book whether it was a ‘conscious rebuke’ of Fred Sr.’s anti-Semitism.
She described President Trump’s 2016 campaign as being racist several times in the book.
‘He did tap into a certain bigotry and inchoate rage, which he’s always been good at doing,’ she wrote, pointing to the 1989 New York Times ad the president took out demanding that the Central Park Five – a group of five black suspects who were cleared of assault and rape charges – be executed.
Mary Trump wrote about the Department of Justice case that accused Fred Trump Sr. and President Trump of not renting apartments to black people, though she called them allegations because she didn’t have evidence to back them up.
While not mentioned in the book, there’s long been speculation that Trump used the n-word behind-the-scenes during the filming of ‘The Apprentice,’ but the tapes have never surfaced.
Pressed by Maddow if she had heard the president use the n-word and anti-Semitic slurs Mary Trump replied: ‘Yes’
Mary Trump said of the Trump family in a new interview with The Washington Post that it was ‘normal to hear them use the n-word or use anti-Semitic expressions.’ Here she’s captured during her first TV interview, with ‘Good Morning America’
She also recalled the odd scene at Ivanka Trump’s wedding to Jared Kushner when Kushner’s father, who’d been released from prison three years prior, spoke about how ‘when Jared had first introduced him to Ivanka, he had thought she would never be good enough to join the family.’
‘It was only after she had committed to converting to Judasim and worked hard to make it happen that he had begun to think she might be worthy of them after all,’ Mary Trump wrote.
The author took offense to this, adding, ‘Considering that Charles had been convicted of hiring a prostitute to seduce his brother-in-law, taping their illicit encounter, and then sending the recording to his sister at his nephew’s engagement party, I found his condescension a bit out of line.’
Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner’s wedding marked the first time Mary Trump had seen her living aunts and uncles in 10 years after her grandfather – and then grandmother – cut Mary Trump and her brother out of their wills, since their father had died.
It kicked off Mary Trump having a closer relationship with her eldest aunt, Maryanne, who’s quoted in parts of the book.
She also said that led to her decision to visit the White House in April 2017, as the family was celebrating aunt Maryanne and also aunt Elizabeth’s birthdays.
Mary Trump, seen sitting at the Resolute Desk in the Oval Office during an April 2017 visit to the White House to celebrate the birthdays of two of her aunts. She opens the book with that White House trip
Still, Mary Trump had been a Hillary Clinton supporter and says she will vote for Joe Biden this time around, while having supported Sen. Elizabeth Warren in the Democratic primary.
She told The Post that she didn’t think her cousin Ivanka was enough of a steadying force in the administration.
‘She doesn’t do anything. She spouts bromides on social media, but either she tries to have an impact and fails, or just isn’t interested in having an impact,’ Mary Trump said. ‘I can’t think of one thing she’s done to show that she’s moderate or a moderating influence.’
And so she decided to make her own mark by putting out the book a mere four months before voters head to the polls.
‘I’d seen enough in the last few years to know that no one thing is going to make a bit of difference,’ she told The Post. ‘This is going to be – using the expression loosely – death by a thousand lashes, right? And maybe in this case it’s going [to] take a million lashes, so it’s more about adding to the record of egregious things that have happened and for which there has been no accountability.’
‘But more than that,’ she continued. ‘I also felt a responsibility to make sure that people are as informed as possible when November comes, because I do not believe that was the case in 2016 at all.’
When asked what will happen if her uncle wins a second term, she told the paper, ‘I may be in the Caribbean.’