Ex-Trump official says 'everyone should hear' this revealing Trump interview reply
U.S. President Donald Trump looks on as he speaks to members of the media aboard Air Force One en route to Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, U.S., March 29, 2026. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz

Anthony Scaramucci wants people to revisit a single answer Donald Trump once gave a journalist, because in his telling it explains the entire playbook the president has run ever since.

The former White House communications director, who lasted around 11 days in Trump's first administration before becoming one of his more relentless critics, resurfaced an exchange between Trump and "60 Minutes" correspondent Lesley Stahl. As Scaramucci recounted it, Stahl asked Trump why he kept branding the press as fake news, and the answer was unusually candid. "I do it because I need to discredit you," Scaramucci quoted Trump as saying, "so that when you say negative things about me, nobody believes you."

For Scaramucci, that is not an offhand remark but a confession of strategy. "That is EXACTLY what he's done," he wrote, arguing that Trump figured out long ago that he "can bully his way through any rule" and that if he keeps pushing harder, people eventually relent. The deeper problem, Scaramucci suggested, is one of character rather than politics. "Most of us grew up with values, ethics, and integrity," he wrote. "That is not Donald Trump."

The post lands with particular weight because of who is making it. Scaramucci once defended Trump on national television and inside his West Wing, which makes his portrait of a man who governs by exhausting his opponents read less like partisan sniping and more like an insider describing a method he watched up close.

His closing line framed the anecdote as a warning rather than a grievance. For most of Trump's life, Scaramucci wrote, the strategy of relentless pressure worked because people gave in, and the only way to break the cycle is to refuse to play along. "We must stand up against it," he wrote.

It is a familiar argument from Trump's critics, but rarely is it grounded in a quote the president reportedly volunteered himself.