By: Shubham Ghosh
After former US president Donald Trump said a number of influential personalities, including the late Princess Diana, “kissed my a**” in private letters, the latter’s brother tore into him saying his sister had found the American politician “worse than an a**l fissure”. He also accused Trump of using Diana’s “good name” to “sell some real estate”.
Charles Spencer posted a strongly-worded tweet on Wednesday (15) saying, “Surprised to hear that Donald Trump is apparently claiming that my late sister Diana wanted to “kiss his a**e”, since the one time she mentioned him to me – when he was using her good name to sell some real estate inNew York – she clearly viewed him as worse than an a**l fissure.”
Surprised to hear that Donald Trump is apparently claiming that my late sister Diana wanted to “kiss his arse”, since the one time she mentioned him to me – when he was using her good name to sell some real estate inNew York – she clearly viewed him as worse than an anal fissure.
— Charles Spencer (@cspencer1508) March 15, 2023
Trump, who is running for the US presidency in next year’s election for the Republicans, claimed while promoting a new book of private letters sent to him by public personalities that Queen Elizabeth II, Diana, the Princess of Wales, and other influential figures who wrote to him “kissed my a**”.
“I think they’re going to see a very fascinating life. I knew them all – and every one of them kissed my a**, and now I only have half of them kissing my a**,” the former US president said, according to a report by The Guardian.
The book, titled ‘Letters To Trump’, is due to be released next month and will feature letters from the likes of Queen Elizabeth II, who passed away last year; the late Princess Diana; Russian president Vladimir Putin; North Korean leader Kim Jong Un; multiple former US presidents; Hillary Clinton; Oprah Winfrey, among others.
It may be mentioned here that Trump had remarked that he “could have had s*x” with the British royal in an interview months after her death in a car crash in France.