Top Aide Denies That Donald Trump Posed As His Own Spokesman

Trump has admitted that he has used at least one pseudonym to speak to reporters.
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WASHINGTON, 2016 - A top aide to Donald Trump said on Sunday he did not believe a report that the billionaire once posed as his own spokesman to brag about his personal life to a celebrity magazine.

The Washington Post released an audio recording on Friday of a man who identified himself as Trump's publicist, "John Miller," and talked about the billionaire's romantic encounters during a conversation with a People Magazine reporter in 1991.

After listening to the tape while appearing on CNN's "State of the Union" show, senior Trump adviser Paul Manafort said he did not believe it was the Republican frontrunner's voice.

"I could barely understand it," Manafort said. "I couldn't tell who it is. Donald Trump says it's not him, I believe it's not him."

Trump told NBC's "Today" show on Friday that the voice was not his, although he has admitted in years past to using at least one pseudonym to speak to reporters.

The original People Magazine article that ran in 1991 winkingly described Miller as "a mysterious PR man who sounds just like Donald."

Within a few days of that article, Sue Carswell, the People reporter who originally made the recording, reported that Trump had admitted that he posed as Miller as a joke and had apologized for it.

Trump effectively locked up his party's nomination earlier this month to run in the November 8 presidential election and has been working to try to unify the Republican Party behind him.

Leading Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton's allies have described Trump as "deceptive" and honed in on his treatment of women. Clinton has begun attacking Trump more aggressively since he effectively secured the nomination, deriding his character and recently suggesting he is hiding something by not releasing his tax returns.

Democratic President Barack Obama used a commencement speech at a university on Sunday to criticize Trump's positions, including a proposal to temporarily ban non-American Muslims from entering the United States.

"Isolating or disparaging Muslims, suggesting that they should be treated differently when it comes to entering this country, that is not just a betrayal of our values, that is not who Americans are," he told the students at Rutgers University in New Jersey.

'LOTS OF PEOPLE USE PEN NAMES'

Although it was widely reported in the early 1990s that Trump sometimes posed as a fake spokesman in order to shape media coverage, the recording of what is said to be such an occurrence only emerged a few days ago.

It quickly rippled through American media. The popular comedy television program "Saturday Night Live" satirized the recording, having an actor posing as Trump calling reporters pretending to be his own spokesman.

The recording featured phrases and speech patterns that Trump commonly uses, including saying "he's starting to do tremendously well financially" and use of the word "frankly," which Manafort dismissed as likely to be adopted by people who worked for Trump.

"The justification for the tape is ... words that are on that tape are words that Donald Trump uses," Manafort said. "I have been working for Donald Trump for six weeks. I'm using words he uses."

Trump's willingness to pose as a fake spokesman first emerged in 1990, when he testified during a lawsuit that he had used the pseudonym John Baron, sometimes rendered in news reports as John Barron, when speaking to journalists by telephone.

"Lots of people use pen names," Newsday quoted Trump as saying after his testimony. "Ernest Hemingway used one."

(Reporting by Ginger Gibson; Additional reporting by Jonathan Allen in New York; Editing by Greg Mahlich and Alan Crosby)

Editor's note: Donald Trump regularly incites political violence and is a serial liarrampant xenophoberacistmisogynist and birther who has repeatedly pledged to ban all Muslims -- 1.6 billion members of an entire religion -- from entering the U.S.

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Before You Go

Potential Trump VP Picks
Ben Carson(01 of11)
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Even though Trump called Carson a child molester, he was delighted when the former neurosurgeon endorsed his campaign in March. In his endorsement, Carson said that there were "two different Trumps" and he was endorsing the more cerebral version of the candidate.

Carson, who is seen as a political outsider like Trump, could also help the presumptive nominee make inroads with evangelical voters. Let’s just hope he’s a better VP than a campaign surrogate.
(credit:Carlo Allegri/Reuters)
Chris Christie(02 of11)
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The New Jersey governor's endorsement of Trump in February came as a surprise to many and gave Trump a high-profile surrogate. Christie failed to pick up much traction during his run, but could be a formidable attack dog on the campaign trail.

Being vice president would also require Christie to spend a lot of time standing behind Trump on television, which could be a problem.
(credit:BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/Getty Images)
Sarah Palin(03 of11)
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The former Alaska governor, who stepped down from her position in 2009, has been a part of the veepstakes before. Trump has played up Palin's January endorsement of him, though her actual endorsement speech was just bizarre.

Picking Palin might be an obvious appeal for women’s votes, though it shouldn’t be -- Palin has disappointed women’s rights activists since she ran for veep in 2008 and recently defended Trump’s anti-abortion views.
(credit:Kamil Krzaczynski/Reuters)
Rick Scott(04 of11)
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The Florida governor, elected to a second term in 2014, has known Trump for a while, was in business before coming to politics and could help in a crucial swing state during the general election. But not everyone’s a fan, and this video of a woman loudly calling Scott “an asshole” in a Starbucks may not be a good look for a potential VP. (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
Tom Brady(05 of11)
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One of Trump's "Make America Great Again" hats was spotted in the locker of the Patriots star quarterback last year, and Brady has called Trump a "good friend."

Still, Brady may want to resolve his own legal woes before jumping into the campaign.
(credit:USA Today Sports/Reuters)
Jon Huntsman(06 of11)
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Huntsman refused to seek Trump's support when he was running for president in 2012, but recently came around to the idea of a Trump presidency.

“We've had enough intraparty fighting. Now's the time to stitch together a winning coalition,” Huntsman told Politico last month. "And it's been clear almost from the beginning that Donald Trump has the ability to assemble a nontraditional bloc of supporters. … The ability to cut across traditional party boundaries — like ’80, ’92 and 2008 — will be key, and Trump is much better positioned to achieve that.”
(credit:ERIC THAYER/Reuters)
Omarosa Manigault(07 of11)
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The former star of “The Apprentice” has been a prominent surrogate for Trump on the campaign trail. Picking Omarosa probably wouldn't help Trump's favorability ratings, given that she was seen as a villain on his show. (credit:Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP)
Bobby Jindal(08 of11)
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Despite once calling Trump a “narcissist” and an “egomaniac”, Jindal said Tuesday he would vote for Trump in November, though he’s “not happy about it.”

Maybe if Jindal were VP, he could help the GOP “stop being the stupid party.”
(credit:CNBC via Getty Images)
Mark Cuban(09 of11)
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Cuban, who owns the Dallas Mavericks, said back in February he’d do a better a job as president than Trump, but later stated he’d agree to be the business mogul’s VP on one condition.

"As long as he said he's listen to me in everything I said we'd be okay,” Cuban told Sports Day.
(credit:Mike Blake/Reuters)
Jeff Sessions(10 of11)
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The endorsement of the Alabama senator was a coup for Trump and helped to fend off attacks from Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) that Trump wasn't serious about his immigration plans. When he endorsed Trump, Sessions admitted Trump wasn't perfect but said he was the most likely to fix the country's immigration system.

Sessions, who has been in the Senate since 1997, could bring a sense of Washington experience to Trump's campaign.
(credit:Bill Clark/Getty Images)
Bobby Knight(11 of11)
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The infamous Indiana Hoosiers head coach recently endorsed Trump, calling the business mogul “the most prepared man in history” to be commander in chief. But it probably wouldn’t hurt for Trump to get a little help from someone who can strategize. (credit:Bloomberg via Getty Images)