If you spend any time following politics on Twitter, you’ve probably encountered the phrase, “There’s always a tweet.” The expression derives from the fact seemingly every time Donald Trump takes a provocative step, his critics discover a tweet from his recent past in which he’s condemned that same step.
The president’s lengthy Twitter archive, in other words, is little more than an elaborate hypocrisy trap.
Occasionally, however, we’re confronted with extreme examples of the phenomenon. USA Today noted overnight, for example:
There’s always a tweet.
In 2014, President Donald Trump railed against then President Barack Obama over his use of executive power on immigration. Fast forward five years and Trump is expected to do the same thing.
“Repubs must not allow Pres Obama to subvert the Constitution of the US for his own benefit & because he is unable to negotiate w/ Congress,” Trump said in a tweet on Nov. 20, 2014.
It’s those last few words in the tweet that are of particular interest: in Trump’s mind, Obama only took executive actions because he lacked the necessary skills to negotiate with lawmakers. If Obama understood how to strike deals, executive actions on issues like immigration wouldn’t be necessary.
Indeed, it’s common knowledge that Trump sold himself to voters in 2016 as the world’s foremost expert on negotiating and deal-making, but it’s less understood that this also became one of his central lines of attack against the Obama presidency.









