Trump Mocked for ‘Smocking Gun’ Tweet: ‘He Can’t Spell Smoking. Not a Typo’

President Donald Trump once again defended his conduct in the sprawling Special Counsel investigation into whether his presidential campaign colluded with the Russian government in a pair of tweets Monday, but thanks to a typo, his comments were trending for all the wrong reasons.

“‘Democrats can’t find a Smocking Gun tying the Trump campaign to Russia after James Comey’s testimony. No Smocking Gun…No Collusion,'” said Trump, misspelling the term “smoking gun” — twice.

Even in a post-covfefe world, the typo at the crux of his defense led to a lot of chuckling online. While Trump frequently deletes his most egregious Twitter misspellings, the “smocking gun” post remained live after two hours on Monday.

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“He can’t spell smoking. Not a typo, he did it twice,” said actor Zach Braff. “He can’t spell smoking.”

“I figured out what Trump was saying when he typed #SmockingGun, thanks to Google Translate,” said NBC political analyst Anand Giridharadas, who jokingly suggested the expression might be Russian.

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And it pretty much went from there.

He can’t spell smoking.
Not a typo, he did it twice.
He can’t spell smoking. #SmockingGun

— Zach Braff (@zachbraff) December 10, 2018

I figured out what Trump was saying when he typed #SmockingGun, thanks to Google Translate. pic.twitter.com/yBWzZK2LFa

— Anand Giridharadas (@AnandWrites) December 10, 2018

The original #SmockingGun pic.twitter.com/orPP8OU3OE

— Ben Mulroney (@BenMulroney) December 10, 2018

As they say, “Don’t take a knife to a #SmockingGun fight”

— Jeff Dwoskin – Hashtag Roundup (@bigmacher) December 10, 2018

Thank you for smocking. #SmockingGun pic.twitter.com/5LEsWNcuOU

— Marika Shaub (@marikatogo) December 10, 2018

Looking for a #SmockingGun. pic.twitter.com/HfITK6VRst

— ????HolyGrail (@JerriGrail) December 10, 2018

The mockery of “smocking gun” obscured perhaps the intended message of Trump’s tweets, in which the president sought to put his payments to porn star Stormy Daniels in perspective — not as an illegal campaign contribution — but as a perfectly normal “private transaction.”

“There was NO COLLUSION,” Trump continued in his tweet. “So now the Dems go to a simple private transaction, wrongly call it a campaign contribution.” Prosecutors, however, have said that Trump attorney/fixer Michael Cohen violated campaign finance laws by making the payments just days before the 2016 election to Stormy Daniels in exchange for her silence about an alleged sexual affair with Trump. The president has publicly denied any sexual relationship between the two.

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After at first denying he had any role in supplying the money, Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani admitted on Fox News in May that Trump had indeed reimbursed his Cohen for the expenditure.

Read original story Trump Mocked for ‘Smocking Gun’ Tweet: ‘He Can’t Spell Smoking. Not a Typo’ At TheWrap