An English teacher once told me that writing styles are like fingerprints: everyone’s is different. That doesn’t mean, however, that they can’t be copied.
There’s a parlor game in some circles about Donald Trump’s tweets, as observers wonder whether individual missives were written by the president or one of his aides. I tend to believe that if the messages include complete sentences and proper capitalization, it’s a safe bet the wording didn’t come from Trump.
But the Boston Globe‘s Annie Linskey reports today that figuring out the author of the presidential tweets isn’t always easy.
The hallmark of President Trump’s Twitter feed is that it sounds like him — grammatical miscues and all.
But it’s not always Trump tapping out a Tweet, even when it sounds like his voice. West Wing employees who draft proposed tweets intentionally employ suspect grammar and staccato syntax in order to mimic the president’s style, according to two people familiar with the process.
They overuse the exclamation point! They Capitalize random words for emphasis. Fragments. Loosely connected ideas. All part of a process that is not as spontaneous as Trump’s Twitter feed often appears.
I see. We’ve reached the point in American history at which White House professionals, with high-paying jobs in the West Wing, take care to write badly, on purpose, in order to sound like the president of the United States.
Somewhere, the aforementioned English teacher is weeping.









