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Sean Spicer book summary: The most important moments as White House press secretary reveals life working for Trump

Spicer helped spin, twist and reject the truth on behalf of Donald Trump – but now he has promised to reveal the reality of speaking for the president

Andrew Griffin
Tuesday 24 July 2018 09:17 BST
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Sean Spicer resigns: The White House Press Secretary's most memorable moments

Donald Trump's mouthpiece is finally talking for himself.

Sean Spicer's book – The Briefing: Politics, The Press and The President – has just been published and offers and unprecedented look into the workings of the White House and its sometimes bizarre, often controversial relationship with the press.

And we will be reading the book live, just as it makes its way from the press itself.

It is the latest in a series of bombshell books detailing life inside Trump's White House. From Michael Wolff's incendiary Fire and Fury to James Comey's combative A Higher Loyalty, many of Mr Trump's foes and confidantes have attempted to peer inside the president's head and work out what is going on.

But Spicer's is the first major release from one of the president's allies. And what an ally he has been: Spicer was famous for defending Trump over and over, even when that meant outright lying or appearing to suggest the holocaust didn't happen.

Now the erstwhile press secretary and communications director will finally give his insight on working for Trump, and helping create the image of the president we have today.

Please allow a moment for the live blog to load.

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I promised there would be no childhood stuff – no Comey-esque stories of bravery and honour and how I found my principles in the authentic and rough American dirt. Well, that was an alternative fact of my own. We're into Spicer's childhood and it's all turning out fairly dull, so I'll just give you the top lines:

  • Raised Roman Catholic
  • Dad was not very political: given to complaining about "idiots" in local or state government, but it was "never ideological or based on party"
  • Grew up in a "tiny town in a small state"
  • Childhood sounds like something from It or Stranger things: "We played four square in the street, rode our bicycles everywhere, and played tag with flashlights when it was dark"
  • Dad sold yachts
  • Later he would learn about how tax is bad because the government decided to tax luxury yachts

So we do get the whole "where I learnt my principles" stuff. Spicer writes that "the experiences of my adolescence were shaping me into the conservative I am today". But it's a lot less highfalutin' than Comey's principles, for example: Spicer's are that he doesn't like politics and doesn't like taxes, which makes sense I suppose.

Andrew Griffin24 July 2018 10:30
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Into Spicer's college years, and they are mostly as dull as his childhood so we'll spend some time skipping over those, too. But there's this bizarre package in which he appears to mock Melissa McCarthy for never having considered learning Japanese, unlike he did. (He did not actually learn Japanese, you'll note.)

Many alarmist books at the time insisted Japan would soon surpass the United States economically, and everyone would live in a Japanese-dominated world. So, learning Japanese was, I reasoned, a smart investment for my future.

As soon as I was admitted to Connecticut College—a small, liberal arts institution with a campus that has that classic, gray-brick, New England look—I immediately set my sights on being a Japanese language major. (Imagine that on Saturday Night Live. I wonder how good Melissa McCarthy’s Japanese is.) Then I encountered Japanese, with its subject- object-verb sentences, its three scripts, and the most complex gram- matical structure of any language. It wasn’t long before I received a letter from the dean suggesting that my talents should be invested elsewhere

Andrew Griffin24 July 2018 10:39
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With that*, the end of chapter two.

* That including a whole load of waffle I skipped out about going to college and interning, etc. If you're really interested in Sean Spicer's life as a student and a political intern then you should buy the book, which is out today with Biteback Publishing and can be bought on Amazon now.

Andrew Griffin24 July 2018 10:42
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A strange thing about this book is that Spicer clearly knows that the only thing people care about is what he knows about Trump, what he did for Trump, and at a push what he thinks of all that, he is desperate for that not to be the case. We're into his time as a young Republican Party hopeful, now, and there's not very much very interesting to say about any of it.

Occasionally he gestures back towards Donald Trump. (This whole discussions was prompted by him marvelling at the fact he was in a room with Trump, despite their different backgrounds, so now we get to hear about his background.) But there's a lot of waffle here, which I'm skipping through, which is why we're moving at quite a rapid clip.

Andrew Griffin24 July 2018 10:55
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Another sprinkle of references to the future:

1) Mike Pence appears, as part of some work that Spicer was doing as a junior GOP staffer. It turns out that Pence was going to interfere with the plan he had for budget messaging, which makes Spicer angry.

"I’d like to say I handled this coolly. I didn’t, and my eruption got back to Pence. Most people in politics don’t worry about things like that. I do."

Later, Spicer would apologise to Pence:

[Pence] looked surprised.

“Don’t worry about it,” he said. “You’re doing a great job.”

That is classic Mike Pence.

Classic Mike Pence.

And 2) "While Melissa McCarthy later made fun of me as the angry press secretary, the truth is that I hate to lose my cool. I have too much Catholic guilt to berate people and feel good about it."

Spicer is clearly still stinging about McCarthy's impression of him on Saturday Night Live. It keeps coming up at the most bizarre moments, and each time it is an anecdote that somehow suggests the impression was incorrect. (But it usually isn't.)

Andrew Griffin24 July 2018 11:00
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I can't quite work out what Sean Spicer thinks his personal brand is. Like this bizarre digression about going to watch a horserace:

The Gold Cup is held in a scenic meadow in the hills not far from the farm estates of Middleburg, Virginia. It’s the kind of event where people dress up in their “Sunday best” to sample delicacies and cham- pagne in tents sponsored by luxury car companies and other corporate sponsors. Many spectators, including myself and my friends, used it as an excuse to drink in the middle of a Saturday.

You know, a real Sean Spicer kind of place.

Is he being sarcastic or not? I have no idea! What is a Sean Spicer kind of place? Somewhere where you drink in the day? Or is he not one of those people? No idea.

In reality, of course, Sean Spicer's brand is actually Melissa-McCarthy-as-Sean-Spicer. Most people know him as a belligerent buffoon played by a woman on a sketch show. That's why the impression was so bruising to him, I suppose.

Andrew Griffin24 July 2018 11:02
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Another brief excursion into something else as Spicer relates his time as a Navy reservist. Which includes a visit to Guantanamo and a little description of just how much of a good time the prisoners are having there:

I was struck by the way our country treated suspected ter- rorists, accused of some of the most heinous crimes. They enjoyed twenty-first century comforts such as satellite television, a full library of DVD selections, healthcare, sporting gear, and a soccer field. These accused terrorists were receiving better treatment than many Americans will ever experience—and their accommodations were being footed by the American taxpayer. There are American veterans—who wore our country’s uniform and deployed to lands far away, leaving families behind, to fight on the front lines of wars—who are living on the streets, wondering where their next meal will come from or how they will receive healthcare. Yet here were these suspected terrorists—the most heinous of them all—living in very comfortable conditions.

But it's true of course that most people in America won't have access to healthcare, as Spicer suggests. He was part of an administration that has rolled back what small efforts there have been to introduce some system of fair provision in the country.

Andrew Griffin24 July 2018 11:09
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After his tour of duty is over, it's back to civilian life. (Spicer was offered a "follow-on" job in the Pentagon but turned it down because he loves politics so much.)

Civilian life now means joining the Republican National Committee's media organisation, and leading that operation.

During my first few months at the RNC, it felt more like working in a startup company than at a national, established political party’s headquarters. We were on a tight timeline to get out of debt and up to speed in time for the 2012 election cycle. We ran lean and mean, and our small but growing communications staff worked seven days a week, doing multiple jobs from operating the RNC’s own TV studio, to book- ing Republican officials on shows, to working with regional media and social media. We kept at it because we knew how much was at stake. Our purpose was simple: raise the money and build the team necessary to get Republicans elected and re-elected.

Our pump-priming investments worked. Led by Angela Meyers and the finance team, donor support for the RNC grew, and we went from a barebones RNC staff of just over eighty to more than 250 at headquar- ters by election day in 2012.

We were still not where we needed to be—the timeline was too short for us to match what the Democrats had—but we had built and cemented a strong team that could offer significant help to the next Republican presidential candidate.

And we all know who would that turn out to be...

Andrew Griffin24 July 2018 11:12
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2012 was, of course, a drubbing, and one that has mostly been picked over: Romney failed to fight against the Obama campaigns social media and campaigning prowess, and the Republicans lost. Much of this is retreading old ground. But someone is back in the picture, literally:

“So waddya think happened?”

Donald Trump sat behind his desk, hands resting on its surface. A bank of large windows overlooked Fifth Avenue, with a view down the street to a nice green corner of Central Park.

Inside, Donald Trump’s office was a mélange of helmets, boxers’ belts, trophies, plaques, and awards. The walls were covered, floor to ceiling, with framed pictures, most of them magazine covers featuring the visage of Trump himself. Trump had run out of room on the walls, so more framed pictures populated the space around the floorboard. His desk housed columns of memos and blueprints.

After the election, Reince had agreed to run for a second term as chairman, and I had agreed to stay on as communications director. Now Reince and I and the staff from the RNC finance department were in New York to meet with big, loyal Republican donors, one of whom resided in a tower that bore his name. We went to Trump Tower for constructive criticism and, we hoped, a large donation. Trump had been a big Romney supporter and was disappointed by his loss.

I told him that the Democrats had huge advantages in voter data and online messaging. He nodded and shot back an analysis of his own.

“Romney blew it,” Trump said. “He should have had me speak at the convention. He could have used me more.”

Andrew Griffin24 July 2018 11:16
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And here we are, back in May 2016, Spicer finally meeting Trump and "reality television becoming reality", as he puts it.

That fateful meeting happens on the plane dubbed Trump Force One – the blue jet that then-candidate Trump flew around in during the campaign. Spicer climbs up into the plane and settles in, ready to meet the man himself.

"Donald Trump gets a lot of ribbing in the press for the over-the- top decor of his homes, but I found the interior of his jet to be tastefully appointed—high-back seats of cream-colored leather, polished panels of cherry wood with spotless brass accents."

The plane takes off and the two finally meet. It seems like an amiable chat: "an easy conversation about the state of the race, the stories of the day, and what the media was up to", and one that makes Spicer feel upbeat. But he's not working for Trump yet – instead having to deal with his comments from the perspective of the Republican Party, which at least claims to be coming from a very different perspective.

Andrew Griffin24 July 2018 11:37

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