Trump's 'worst nightmare' is coming true — and his 'temper tantrum' is proof: Mary Trump
Donald Trump's "worst nightmare" is coming true, his niece said Monday night.
Mary Trump, an outspoken critic of the former president, told subscribers of her newsletter, "The Good In Us" on Monday night that recent polls show her uncle — "the old, white, racist" is being beaten by a "young, strong Black woman."
Unsurprisingly, she added, he isn’t taking it well. That fact sticks in his craw and has contributed to his recent outbursts attacking Black journalists, women and Georgia officials, as well as congratulating Russian President Vladimir Putin on last week's prisoner swap.
Trump thought the election was in the bag when he was running against President Joe Biden. Now that Biden has bowed out and endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris to take the reins, he's upset that she has reset the race, Ms. Trump wrote.
Adding to complications: not only is there "positive buzz" around Harris, his own running mate, J.D. Vance, has become a "national punchline."
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"No wonder Donald spent the weekend in Georgia throwing a temper tantrum," Ms. Trump jabbed.
As he took shots directed at officials in Georgia for failing to overturn the 2020 election, it was his complaints over crowd size that really "underscored how weak and jealous he is," she argued.
"He blamed school officials for not letting more people into his event, a lie so transparent that not even he believed it," she said, going so far as to accuse her uncle of whining.
"Neither Donald nor his campaign is doing well, and the worse the latter does, the worse the former is going to get," she later wrote.
Donald Trump, she asserted, isn't ready for the moment.
"A disciplined candidate would never engage in weeks of baseless and otherwise racist attacks against an opponent who is smarter, stronger, and infinitely savvier politically than he is," she said. "It is foolish to give a seasoned prosecutor—especially one who is two weeks out from giving her acceptance speech to what will likely be the largest audience in convention history—so much ammunition."