Reports that Donald Trump posed as his own spokesman in a 1991 telephone interview may not harm his campaign to become president, a senior Republican strategist said Saturday.
The presumptive GOP nominee has denied he pretended to be his own publicist, despite an audio recording with a reporter that reveals a remarkably similar voice.
A Washington Post report details how Trump posed as “John Miller” or “John Barron” throughout his career when talking to reporters to promote positive stories about himself and float dating rumors.
Kevin Sheridan, who served as Rep. Paul Ryan’s communications director and an adviser to Mitt Romney’s presidential campaign, told “TODAY” that the revelation was unlikely to make any difference to his bid for the White House.
“He didn’t need to lie about it — he could have just admitted it … most people already knew,” Sheridan said. “It doesn’t seem to matter to his voters.”
He added: “This is an unforced error for him, but it remains to be seen whether or not it actually matters to [general election] voters.”
The Post obtained an audio recording of a decades-old interview between Miller and People magazine reporter Sue Carswell that reveals Trump’s spokesmen sounded nearly identical to the now presumptive Republican presidential nominee — from his tone to his cadence to his catchphrases.
Carswell told NBC News Friday she has no doubt that the audio is authentic and is of the interview conducted back in 1991.
“It’s absolutely Donald Trump,” Carswell said. “There’s no doubt in my mind,” she added.
On the “TODAY” show Friday, Trump denied ever posing as his own publicist. But in a court case in 1990, Trump testified under oath, “I believe on occasion I used that [John Barron] name.”
And a July 13, 1990, Newsday article states: “At one point, Trump, who spends millions of dollars advertising his name, acknowledged that he has used an alias, ‘John Baron.’ ‘I believe on occasion I used that name,’ Trump said, not elaborating.”









