Trump Attacked John Mccain Yet Again on Thursday

President Trump attacked John McCain over what he called the

Credit... Doug Mills/The New York Times

WASHINGTON — Tucked between St. Patrick's Twenty-four hours greetings and repeat criticism of a rerun of "Saturday Night Live," President Trump demonstrated that not fifty-fifty death provides a respite from his wrath on Twitter.

In posts on Saturday and Sunday, Mr. Trump renewed his criticism of Senator John McCain, the Arizona Republican who died in August from complications from a virulent class of brain cancer.

The president attacked Mr. McCain over his office in the Justice Department investigation into Russian efforts to influence the 2016 presidential election. He so added that Mr. McCain "had far worse 'stains' " on his record, including the senator'southward decisive vote against repealing the Affordable Care Act.

"Spreading the fake and totally discredited Dossier 'is unfortunately a very dark stain against John McCain,'" he tweeted on Saturday, quoting comments in a Play a trick on News interview by the former independent counsel Ken Starr virtually the and then-called Steele Dossier, which outlined a range of often salacious but unproven misdeeds by Mr. Trump and his associates.

"And so it was indeed (but proven in courtroom papers) 'last in his class' (Annapolis) John McCain that sent the False Dossier to the FBI and Media hoping to take it printed Before the Ballot," he wrote on Sunday. "He & the Dems, working together, failed (as usual). Fifty-fifty the Faux News refused this garbage!"

In fact, Mr. McCain provided a copy of the dossier to the F.B.I. later Ballot Day. But supporters of Mr. Trump have seized on the dossier's uncorroborated accusations and political roots in the entrada as a way to effort to discredit the special counsel's Russia inquiry.

The comments exemplified Mr. Trump's model for presidential communication, both in form and tone, exploiting the power and urgency of social media, often with harsh and bitterly personal attacks. Simply they also sparked swift condemnation, showing that the president abandons conventional boundaries of civility like not speaking ill of the expressionless at his peril.

"There'southward no low with him," John Weaver, who was a political adviser to Mr. McCain, said in an interview. "There'southward no bottom."

Mr. Trump and Mr. McCain had a long history of enmity, one that lasted even through the senator's death. Mr. McCain made it clear that Mr. Trump was not welcome at his memorial service in Washington, fifty-fifty equally both President Barack Obama, who defeated Mr. McCain in the 2008 presidential race, and President George W. Bush, who defeated him in the Republican primaries in 2000, delivered eulogies.

And over the weekend, the tensions resurfaced, as McCain supporters denounced the president's tweets — and, in many cases, the president himself.

Mr. Weaver criticized Mr. Trump's abstention of service in Vietnam, where Mr. McCain was held captive as a prisoner of war, his refusal to release his own grades while criticizing Mr. McCain's academic performance at the U.s.a. Naval Academy, and the president'due south desire to terminate the Affordable Care Human action.

"These are the things he wanted to assault John McCain on? Seriously?" Mr. Weaver said.

"I am waiting for Republican members of the Senate who served with the senator for years and allowed him to exist the point of the spear on then many issues," he said. "Where are they?"

Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina and one of Mr. McCain'southward closest friends, chose to praise his friend rather than criticize the president.

"Every bit to @SenJohnMcCain and his devotion to his country: He stepped forward to risk his life for his country, served honorably under hard circumstances, and was ane of the virtually consequential senators in the history of the body," he said on Twitter. "Nothing about his service will ever exist changed or macerated."

Mike Murphy, another McCain political adviser, displayed no such reluctance to chastise the president: "McCain was a hero," he said. "Trump is a whimpering coward. He was agape to go to Vietnam 47 years agone and is afraid to face the legal consequences of his actions today."

"He just has no empathy," Mr. Murphy said. "He's only concerned with himself."

Mark Salter, one of Mr. McCain's closest advisers and co-author of several books with him, was fifty-fifty more biting.

"Here is what will never change," Mr. Salter said in a tweet. "John McCain will e'er exist a amend man than yous in every way we measure out a man's character. You'll never beat him."

The White House did not respond to a request for comment about Mr. Trump'southward remarks.

Still, Mr. Trump insisted on using Mr. McCain every bit a posthumous whipping postal service, even taking a dig at Mr. McCain'southward bookish record, calling him "last in his form." Mr. McCain often mocked his own functioning in the classroom every bit a midshipman, and never shied from noting that he graduated 5th from the lesser.

The president had no public events on his schedule this weekend, but he kept upwardly a barrage of tweets. He called for fealty to the Flim-flam News personalities Jeanine Pirro, who was suspended past the network afterwards questioning a Muslim lawmaker's loyalty to the Usa, and Tucker Carlson, who has come up under criticism for his remarks on a daze-jock radio program almost a decade ago. Mr. Trump also over again threatened to use the federal government to crack down on programs that make fun of him, singling out "Saturday Night Live."

He did participate in 1 unscheduled issue, taking a curt car ride across Pennsylvania Avenue on Sunday to nourish services at St. John's Episcopal Church, a rarity for Mr. Trump.

The second reading, according to the plan, was from Philippians, which begins "join together in post-obit my example, brothers and sisters, and just as you lot accept usa as a model, keep your optics on those who live as nosotros practise."

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Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/17/us/politics/trump-mccain-twitter.html

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