
A new book is leaking information about President Donald Trump's alleged demands that were shut down by his top advisers as he entered the White House.
According to the forthcoming book "2024: How Trump Retook the White House and the Democrats Lost America," Trump wanted to hire 9-11 conspiracy theorist Laura Loomer to handle his press over Republican operative Karoline Leavitt.
The Daily Mail reported that the book, penned by Josh Dawsey, Tyler Pager and Isaac Arnsdorf, claims Trump once asked his staff if Loomer was far too outside the mainstream.
"Many of Trump's advisers viewed Loomer as too-conspiracy-minded and pugilistic, but he liked her," the book says.
"Is she too fringe to be press secretary?" Trump asked aides at one point.
The Daily Mail noted that aides clearly talked him out of it.
Still, Loomer has been a frequent face at the White House, accounting for the firing of multiple administration officials in April. Loomer, who once claimed 9/11 was an inside job, urged Trump to get rid of roughly a dozen National Security Council staff, CNN reported at the time.
Even some of the most strident MAGA followers, like Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA), take issue with Loomer, the Daily Mail recalled. Last September, Greene complained Loomer was a "huge problem" for MAGA world due to her "rhetoric and hateful tone," CNN said.
Loomer alleged that if Vice President Kamala Harris was elected to the White House it would smell like curry all the time. Harris' mother was an immigrant from India.
One of Trump's most notable conspiracy theories came from Loomer as well, the book continues.
Loomer "showed him allegations circulating online about a community of thousands of Haitian immigrants resettled in the Ohio town of Springfield, accusing them of stealing geese and cats for food," the authors write.
"Loomer showed him a call to the county sheriff complaining of Haitians carrying geese away from a public park and a woman arrested for eating a cat," the book adds.
The book claims, "Trump's pet-eating line was the debate's most memorable, launching a thousand memes and becoming a TikTok trend. It put the focus on immigration, the strongest possible terrain for Trump, and did so in a way that appealed especially to young voters."