WASHINGTON — Stephanie Grisham, the former Trump White House press secretary perhaps best known for never holding a televised briefing with reporters, plans to release a tell-all book next week that accuses President Donald Trump of abusing his staff, placating dictators like Vladimir Putin of Russia, and making sexual comments about a young White House aide.
In her book, titled "I'll Take Your Questions Now," Grisham recalls her time working for a president she said constantly berated her and made outlandish requests, including a demand that she appear before the press corps and re-enact a certain call with the Ukrainian president that led to Trump's (first) impeachment, an assignment she managed to avoid.
"I knew that sooner or later the president would want me to tell the public something that was not true or that would make me sound like a lunatic," Grisham writes, offering a reason for why she never held a briefing.
After serving as press secretary, Grisham worked in Melania Trump's office. She resigned on Jan. 6 as a horde of Trump supporters attacked the U.S. Capitol. Her book was kept a secret from her closest allies in the White House, though by the time she departed Washington that number had dwindled. (She writes that, months before the election, she had moved to Kansas.) Her publisher, HarperCollins, calls the book "The most frank and intimate portrait of the Trump White House yet."
The former president and his advisers have already moved to discredit Grisham's account, and have used increasingly personal terms to disparage her.
"Stephanie didn't have what it takes and that was obvious from the beginning," Trump said in a statement on Tuesday. He accused of her becoming "very angry and bitter" after a breakup. "She had big problems and we felt that she should work out those problems for herself. Now, like everyone else, she gets paid by a radical left-leaning publisher to say bad and untrue things."
In her book, Grisham offered a preemptive response to the criticism: "This is not, by the way, a book where you need to like me."
Here are some highlights from the manuscript obtained by The New York Times: