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Anthony Scaramucci owns some mistakes, criticizes Stephen Bannon on ABC’s ‘This Week’

August 14, 2017 by  
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Anthony Scaramucci made his introductory appearance on the Sunday morning news shows just a few weeks ago as the newly named White House communications director. His latest outing came Sunday as the fired White House communications director.

A standout character in a Trump administration crowded with colorful characters, Scaramucci had a whirlwind tenure at the White House. A former hedge fund manager and Obama supporter, “the Mooch” was named communications director on July 21. Just 10 days and one expletive-laden interview with a journalist later — and before his official start date — he was fired by incoming Chief of Staff John F. Kelly. His name became a fixture on the late-night comedy circuit.

After weeks of silence, “the Mooch” is now embarking on his image-rehabilitation tour, which began Sunday on ABC’s “This Week with George Stephanopolous” and will continue Monday on CBS’ “The Late Show With Stephen Colbert.”

His segment on “This Week” was wrapped into an examination of the aftermath of a white nationalist rally on Saturday in Charlottesville, Va. And Scaramucci found himself back in his former role, saying he “wouldn’t have recommended” the statement Trump made after a man drove his car into a crowd of peaceful counter-protestors, killing a 32-year-old woman and injuring many other people.

Trump, in a televised appearance Saturday from his private golf club in New Jersey, said, “ We condemn in the strongest possible terms this egregious display of hatred, bigotry and violence on many sides, on many sides.” The comment was immediately criticized by Democrats and Republicans who blasted Trump for not specifically calling out the white nationalists.

“I think he needed to be much harsher,” Scaramucci said, praising an earlier segment with H.R. McMaster, in which the president’s national security advisor called the attack an act of terrorism.

“Whether it’s domestic or international terrorism, with the moral authority of the president you have to call that stuff out,” Scaramucci said.

Scaramucci once again took aim at White House senior advisor Stephen K. Bannon, whom he had targeted with raw sexual imagery in his notorious interview with a New Yorker reporter. Criticizing the politics of the former chief of the far-right website Breitbart News, Scaramucci encouraged Trump to abandon what he called the “Bannon-Bart influence” on his policies and move more toward the mainstream, where the moderate and independent voters are who “love the president.”