Trump Prank-Called Michigan Congresswoman, New Book Claims

Rep. Debbie Dingell (D-Mich.) didn't recognize the name the caller gave her on the phone, but she had a feeling it could be Donald Trump, according to New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman's new book.
Rep. Debbie Dingell (D-Mich.) did not acknowledge the identify the caller gave her on the telephone, however she had a sense it might be Donald Trump, in response to New York Occasions reporter Maggie Haberman's new ebook.
Patrick Semansky/Related Press

Former President Donald Trump reportedly prank-called a Michigan congresswoman after she voted to question him in 2019, in response to a brand new ebook by New York Occasions reporter Maggie Haberman.

Haberman described the prank name that Trump allegedly made to Rep. Debbie Dingell (D-Mich.) in a Twitter thread on Wednesday.

Trump allegedly posed as a Washington Submit reporter, asking Dingell a collection of questions on her impeachment vote.

“Rep. Debbie Dingell obtained a name on her cellular phone after she stated she was voting to question Trump in 2019,” Haberman posted. “Trump excoriated her lately deceased, standard husband at a rally, and he or she condemned it. The following day, she obtained a name on her cell from somebody claiming to be a Washington Submit reporter whose identify she didn’t know. The extra he talked, she couldn’t shake the sense that it was President Trump.”

Haberman stated the quotes from the prank telephone name by no means appeared in any Washington Submit story.

In a evaluate of Haberman’s forthcoming ebook, “Confidence Man,” The Washington Submit gave extra element in regards to the alleged name. Haberman stated the person on the telephone knew Dingell’s late husband, Rep. John Dingell (D-Mich.), from “his investigations in Congress.”

“The identify he gave was not one she acknowledged,” Haberman implied. “The person requested Dingell if she was in search of an apology from Trump. No, she replied, merely that individuals might be civil to at least one one other.”

Trump reportedly has a historical past of calling members of the media below such aliases as “John Miller” or “John Barron,” in response to The Washington Submit. He would faux to be a publicist or a spokesperson defending the problems surrounding Trump’s life and bragging about Trump’s prowess and accomplishments.

HuffPost reached out to Dingell however didn't hear again in time for publication.

Trump was displeased with Debbie Dingell’s impeachment vote, which prompted him to say at a December 2019 rally that her late husband obtained “A+ remedy” for his funeral and instructed he’s “wanting up” from hell. After John Dingell died in early 2019, Trump ordered all U.S. flags to fly at half-staff in his honor.

She calls me up. It’s the nicest factor that’s ever occurred,” Trump claimed on the rally. “‘Thanks a lot. John ought to be so thrilled. He’s wanting down. He’d be so thrilled. Thanks a lot, sir.’ I stated, ‘That’s OK, don’t fear about it.’ Perhaps he’s wanting up. I don’t know. I don’t know. Perhaps. Perhaps. However let’s assume he’s wanting down.”

Dingell condemned Trump’s statements, saying that “you introduced me down in a approach you possibly can by no means think about,” and “your hurtful phrases simply made my therapeutic a lot more durable,” on Twitter in 2019.

John Dingell was the longest-serving congressman in U.S. historical past. He was changed by his spouse in November 2014, after retiring earlier that 12 months.

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