The White House has previously been forced to deny rumours that the couple
were on the verge of splitting up in 2000 following claims in the
controversial Ed Klein book The Amateur.
The book, which was rubbished by critics as “fiction”, also claimed
the president had been depressed and suicidal after a failed election bid in
Chicago.
At the time Eric Schultz, a spokesman for the president, said: “Ed Klein has a
proven history of reckless fabrication in order to sell books. Nobody in
their right mind would believe the nonsense in this one.”
Trump has a dubious record when it comes to allegations about Barack Obama –
most notably with the “birther conspiracy”, which led some to question
why Mitt Romney has failed to distance himself from the mogul.
Commenting in May on the potential embarrassment Trump could cause to the
Romney campaign, George Will, the conservative commentator, said: “I do
not understand the cost benefit here. The cost of appearing with this
bloviating ignoramus is obvious, it seems to me.”
The “birther conspiracy” was eventually laid to rest in 2011 after
the White House released President Obama’s birth certificate showing he had
been born in Hawaii and not Kenya as Trump had relentlessly insisted.