Trump campaign sues Omarosa as US president calls ex-Apprentice star turned White House aide 'a dog'

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President Trump goes after his former aide, Omarosa Maginault Newman, calling her a 'lowlife' and a 'dog', after she questioned his mental fitness and accused him of using racial slurs.
Ms Omarosa Manigault-Newman appearing alongside then Republican presidential hopeful Donald Trump in 2015. PHOTO: AFP

WASHINGTON (REUTERS) - United States President Donald Trump on Tuesday (Aug 14) called former White House aide Omarosa Manigault-Newman a "dog", and his campaign took legal action against her as the two former reality TV stars escalated their public feud.

The intensifying spat came as Ms Manigault-Newman, a former contestant on Trump's reality show The Apprentice, publicly released more recordings from her time in his orbit as she promoted her tell-all book, Unhinged, which describes her year at the White House.

She was fired last December.

"When you give a crazed, crying lowlife a break, and give her a job at the White House, I guess it just didn't work out. Good work by General (John) Kelly for quickly firing that dog!" Mr Trump wrote on Twitter, referring to his chief of staff.

In her book, Ms Manigault-Newman accuses Mr Trump of making derogatory statements about African-Americans, Filipinos and other minorities, as well as of exhibiting "forgetfulness and frustration".

"His mental decline could not be denied," wrote Ms Manigault-Newman, who had been one of the Republican President's most prominent black supporters.

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White House spokesman Sarah Sanders, asked if she was surprised by Ms Manigault-Newman's animus toward the President, told reporters she was disappointed by what she called the former aide's self-serving and false claims.

"I think it's really sad what's she's doing," Ms Sanders told a White House briefing.

In recent days, Ms Manigault-Newman released audio of her firing by Mr Kelly and of a call from Mr Trump in which he says he did not know about her dismissal.

On Tuesday, CBS News released another recording it said was unverified but appeared to be Ms Manigault-Newman and several Trump campaign aides in October 2016 discussing the potential fallout from a tape of Mr Trump using a racial epithet during the taping of The Apprentice.

CBS News' parent company, CBS Corp, owns Simon and Schuster, which published her book. In it, Ms Manigault-Newman describes the recorded conversation as being a conference call held on Oct 11, 2016.

Reuters could not verify any of the recordings.

Mr Trump on Monday denied the existence of any tape from The Apprentice in which he used the racial epithet.

Asked whether she could guarantee such a recording would never surface, Ms Sanders said: "I can't guarantee anything, but I can tell you that the President addressed this question directly."

In a related development, a Trump campaign official said the campaign, which is gearing up for his 2020 re-election run, had filed an arbitration against Ms Manigault-Newman for breaching a 2016 confidentiality agreement.

Asked about the pact, Ms Manigault-Newman told MSNBC she did not believe she had violated it.

Critics condemned Mr Trump's tweet for what they said were racial and sexist undertones.

"The President of the United States is calling a woman of color a dog? ...How dare he call anyone a dog?" Democratic US Representative Frederica Wilson, who is also an African-American, told CNN.

US Senator Jeff Flake, a frequent Trump critic, called the President's language "unbecoming" and, in a tweet quoting the President's post, wrote that fellow Republicans "should not be okay with it."

Mr Trump brought on Ms Manigault-Newman, previously known for repeatedly being fired on NBC's The Apprentice, as director of communications for the White House Office of Public Liaison.

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