Current:Home > NewsOmarosa slams Donald Trump's 'Black jobs' debate comments, compares remarks to 'slavery' -TrueNorth Finance Path
Omarosa slams Donald Trump's 'Black jobs' debate comments, compares remarks to 'slavery'
View
Date:2025-04-16 06:40:17
Omarosa Manigault Newman is criticizing former boss Donald Trump for his "Black jobs" comment at this week's debate.
Trump’s remarks arrived as he slammed President Joe Biden on the hot-button issue of immigration. The former president argued that “the millions of people he's allowed to come in through the border, they're taking Black jobs.”
But in an interview with TMZ about Trump's remarks, Newman asked, "What is a Black job? I don't know where he got that from unless he's taking it all the way back to slavery because you know the only 100% Black job in this country was back during slavery time."
She went on to call his statements "so insane" and added that "the Black and Hispanic community are not monolithic." But Newman threw shade at the country's 45th president over his handling of race.
"I think that people will come to terms with the fact that Trump may not be equipped to deal with the racial issues that are going on in the country," she said. "In fact, he's kind of fed into a lot of them."
Newman first rose to fame as a cast member on "The Apprentice" and is the former NBC reality competition's most famous alum. After that, she starred on the Hollywood-tinged version, "Celebrity Apprentice," as a fiery competitor. Then, Newman became one of the most prominent Black members in Trump's White House, as she worked on outreach to Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) and racial disparities in the military justice system.
Donald Trump found guilty on all countsin historic NY hush money trial: Recap
Omarosa leveled racial accusations at Donald Trump after leaving White House
While Trump tweeted well wishes during Newman's December 2017 departure, their relationship later soured — and Newman's comments aren't the first time she's compared the former president's actions to "slavery."
In February 2018, when discussing "thinking of writing a tell-all sometime" about her tenure in the White House during her time on CBS' "Celebrity Big Brother," Newman compared serving at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. to slavery.
“Ooh, freedom, I’ve been emancipated. I feel like I just got freed off of a plantation,” Omarosa Manigault Newman said of her exit from the White House, according to The Wrap and People magazine.
Later that year, she released the tell-all book, "Unhinged," which included critiques of Trump’s mental state and portrayed the former president as racist. She also claims to have secretly recorded conversations with Trump and then-Chief of Staff John Kelly, among others.
However, her "racist" comments about Trump opposed earlier remarks she made immediately after leaving the White House in December 2017, when she told ABC News that "he is not a racist."
“It has been very, very challenging being the only African-American woman in the senior staff,” she told ABC News’ "Nightline" during a day-long media tour on television after leaving the Trump White House. She said most of Trump’s other senior advisers “had never worked with minorities" and "didn't know how to interact with them.”
“Yes, I will acknowledge many of the exchanges, particularly in the last six months, have been racially charged,” she said. “Do we then just stop and label him as a racist? No.”'
Contributing: Gregory Korte, Lindsay Schnell
veryGood! (5451)
Related
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- Child rights advocates ask why state left slain 5-year-old Kansas girl in a clearly unstable home
- Even with economic worries, Vivid Seats CEO says customers still pay to see sports and hair bands
- Best Buy set to stop selling DVD and Blu-ray discs
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- What is certain in life? Death, taxes — and a new book by John Grisham
- Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce's Dreamy NYC Date Night Featured Surprise Appearances on SNL
- France player who laughed during minute’s silence for war victims apologizes for ‘nervous laugh’
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- 6 killed in Russian attacks on Ukraine as Kyiv continues drone counterstrikes
Ranking
- Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
- Jury selection to begin Friday in first Georgia election interference trial
- Slave descendants are suing to fight zoning changes they say threaten their island homes off Georgia
- AP PHOTOS: Scenes of pain and grief on war’s 10th day
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- Israel-Hamas war upends China’s ambitions in the Middle East but may serve Beijing in the end
- Kate Spade 24-Hour Flash Deal: Get This $300 Large Tote Bag for Just $75
- Powerful earthquake shakes west Afghanistan a week after devastating quakes hit same region
Recommendation
Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
Connecticut postmaster pleads guilty to fraud in $875,000 bribery scheme with maintenance vendor
Israel warns northern Gaza residents to leave, tells U.N. 1.1 million residents should evacuate within 24 hours
Arizona tribe protests decision not to prosecute Border Patrol agents who fatally shot Raymond Mattia
New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
Poland waits for final election result after ruling party and opposition claim a win
UN will repatriate 9 South African peacekeepers in Congo accused of sexual assault
Jim Jordan still facing at least 10 to 20 holdouts as speaker vote looms, Republicans say