Donald Trump dictates his tweets to an aide and delivers precise instructions about the use of punctuation marks such as Oxford commas and exclamation points, a court has heard.
Madeleine Westerhout, who worked as Mr Trump’s personal secretary until 2019, told his New York hush money trial that the ex-president preferred her to note down his thoughts rather than write the social media posts himself.
He would then edit them on paper and had very specific requirements about grammar, according to Ms Westerhout, who later became tearful in the witness box as she recalled her time in the White House.
“My recollection is there are certain words he liked to capitalise,” she said. “Words like ‘country’. He liked to use exclamation points.
“It is my understanding that he liked to use the Oxford comma.”
Mr Trump is accused of falsifying records to hide a payment to adult film actress Stormy Daniels. He denies the charges.
Giving evidence for the prosecution, Ms Westerhout provided details about Mr Trump’s workflow for communicating via Twitter, his preferred social media platform until the end of his presidency in 2020.
Mr Trump did not use a computer or have an email address, to the best of her knowledge. He preferred to dictate his tweets to her, she said.
Ms Westerhout, whose desk was positioned directly outside the Oval Office, said she would take notes, quickly type up the draft and print it out for him.
Occasionally, Mr Trump would have more edits. She told the court she soon learned what made a “signature” Trump tweet.
Mr Trump’s top aide, Dan Scavino, had access to the @realDonaldTrump account, she said, and he would generally craft the tweets once the wording had been finalised.
But Ms Westerhout said she would occasionally stand-in when Mr Scavino was absent.