Scaramucci labels Vance, Tuberville ‘spineless sycophants’ after senators appear at Trump courthouse

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Scaramucci labels Vance, Tuberville ‘spineless sycophants’ after senators appear at Trump courthouse

Former White House communications director Anthony Scaramucci labeled Sens. J.D. Vance (R-Ohio) and Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.) as “spineless sycophants,” after the senators traveled to Manhattan to support former President Trump in his ongoing hush money trial.

Scaramucci claimed that Trump, his former boss, is “destroying the Republican Party.”

“So, there’s … very few people with any backbone left in that party,” he said Monday in an interview on CNN. “And those people standing out there, they’re just spineless sycophants.”

His remarks came after Vance and Tuberville made comments near the New York courthouse where Trump is on trial for charges related to falsifying business records around payments he made in 2016 to silence adult film star Stormy Daniels, who claimed she had an affair with Trump in 2006. The former president has denied the affair.

Trump’s former personal attorney, Michael Cohen, allegedly paid Daniels and received reimbursement from the former president. He took the stand Monday and was the target of Vance’s comments.

The Ohio senator aimed to discredit Cohen’s testimony by saying he’s a convicted felon and said he doesn’t think any “reasonable, sensible person” should believe what he says in court.

Tuberville said the trial was “the most depressing thing” he’s witnessed and took aim at the Manhattan district attorney. He said he was in attendance to show support “more as a friend” than backing Trump’s candidacy.

Scaramucci dismissed the comment, saying the senators are doing “whatever Donald Trump wants.”

He also said Trump’s most unwavering supporters are looking at poll numbers and they’re “looking at Twitter,” now known as social media platform X, “which is a closed sphere of influence.” The former White House aide argued senators believe that Trump “has already won the election.”

“So, that’s why they’re there,” Scaramucci said in comments highlighted by Mediaite.

His criticism comes as Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) is also expected to make a visit to the Manhattan courthouse.

Cohen, who has become one of Trump’s loudest critics, is expected to take the stand again Tuesday. He’s a central figure in the trial, with prosecutors claiming he made the $130,000 hush money payment to Daniels ahead of the 2016 presidential election.

The Hill reached out to Tuberville and Vance for comment.