Donald Trump’s Top Twitter Moments; Stephen Colbert Might Be Wrong When He Said Trump Can’t Win
Fans of the presidential candidate Donald Trump should be fairly familiar with how Trump manages to use his Twitter account in his campaign. Recent news have highlighted some of Donald's best twitter moments. Moreover, it seemed like Stephen Colbert has started to notice the candidate's potential of winning the upcoming presidential race, according to sources.
Recently, Donald Trump has taken Twitter by a storm when he criticized Hilary Clinton's campaign by saying that she got "schlonged" by Obama, courtesy of Market Watch.
"When I said that Hillary Clinton got schlonged by Obama, it meant got beaten badly," the presidential candidate Donald Trump tweeted while defending his use of the vernacular, as stated on his Twitter account. "The media knows this. Often used word in politics," he added.
Donald Trump also took on Twitter his feud against another presidential candidate Jeb Bush when the latter began airing a series of digital ads that included Bush's criticism of Donald Trump's performance during the last Republican debate and dubbed him as a "chaos candidate," and attacked his policy proposals for lacking sincerity, according to CNN Edition.
"Weak and low energy @JebBush, whose campaign is a disaster, is now doing ads against me where he tries to look like a tough guy," Trump tweeted as a response to Bush's digital ads.
"@JebBush just took millions of $'s in special interest money to look like a though guy," he further tweeted. "Will never work," he added.
Donald Trump even went on to criticize debate moderator Megyn Kelly over at his Twitter page when he accused the latter of unfair coverage and being "the most overrated anchor at Fox News," as reported by CNN Money.
"@megynkelly, the most overrated anchor at @FoxNews, worked hard to explain away the new Monmouth poll 41 to 14 or 27 pt lead. She said 15," Donald tweeted.
As for the recent travesty that happened in the Miss Universe Pageant, Trump also commented by stating that the Harvey Gaffe would have been avoided he was still the owner, according to rolling out.
In more recent news, Stephen Colbert admitted that he does admire Donald Trump's skill in drafting messages that many voters react to, as reported by the Boston Globe.
"There's a populism to Trump that I find very appealing," Colbert stated during an interview on CBS, courtesy of the source. "And it's only this: The party elders want him to go away, but the people have decided that he's not going to," he added/
"I may disagree with anything that he's saying and think that his proposals are a little-well, more than a little shocking," Colbert stated, courtesy of The Daily Beast.
"But there is something really hopeful about the fact that, well, 36 percent of the likely voters want him, so the people in the machine don't get to say otherwise. That's the one saving grace, I think, if his candidacy," he added.