The most controversial moments of Sean Spicer's wild ride as Trump's press secretary by Veronika Bondarenko on Sep 1, 2017, 10:24 AM Advertisement
Sean Spicer officially departed the White House on Thursday, one month after announcing his resignation as President Donald Trump's press secretary. As the buffer between the press and Trump, Spicer had a challenging job — one that he made even more difficult with repeated blunders and controversies. Here are some of the biggest controversies to take place since Spicer took over the role of the official White House press secretary on January 20. SEE ALSO: Jerry Springer is getting closer to a decision about running for governor in Ohio Spicer's role started off to a rocky start when, two days after Trump's inauguration, when he declared Trump had "the largest audience to witness an inauguration, period." Despite photos of the event showing a crowd much sparser than former President Barack Obama's 2009 inauguration, Spicer insisted that no other president attracted a bigger crowd of visitors and fought with reporters who challenged his assertion.
Spicer repeatedly went back and forth on whether Trump's decision to block people from seven Muslim-majority countries from entering the US was indeed "a ban." Even though Trump himself tweeted about the travel ban, Spicer insisted that it "can't be a ban" and should instead be called "extreme vetting."
During his time as press secretary, Spicer became known for repeatedly sparring with reporters — such as when he told one journalist to "calm down" and another one to stop shaking her head. "Calm down," Spicer once told a journalist who was asking him questions about Trump's claims of wiretapping during the 2016 elections.
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