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He noted that Steven Cheung, the White House communications director, had used the word last month when he called Newsom "the biggest cuck in politics." ...
White House Communications Director Steven Cheung, in a statement shared by The New York Times in March: "The White House has not been given any tender, loving care in many decades, so President ...
Maria Farmer, who once worked for Epstein, told The New York Times that she had encountered Trump in Epstein's Manhattan offices in 1995.
White House Communications Director Steven Cheung denied the story. “The president was never in his office,” he told the Times.
“The president was never in [Epstein’s] office,” said White House communications director Steven Cheung. “The fact is that the president kicked him out of his club for being a creep.” ...
Steven Cheung, the White House communications director, slammed Farmer’s story of her meeting with Trump in Epstein’s office.
White House spokesperson Steven Cheung called the reporting “recycled, old fake news of the highest order.” ...
The president’s past suggests, he was a high-profile doodler — or at least suggested he was. In the early 2000s, he donated drawings to charities in New York.
On Friday, White House spokesman Steven Cheung dismissed the report and any suggestion that Trump's drawings resembled the one described by the Journal.