Hunter Biden blasted Donald Trump and called him a “vile man” as he accused him of corruption in his bombshell memoir.
Biden’s bold allegations against the former president are presented in detail in his memoir, Beautiful Things, which is set to hit the shelves on April 6.
In his book, the 46th US President’s son opened up about his career, his business dealings, and his private life – including his infamous affair and his battle with addictions.
The memoir also touches the political scene with a particular focus on the former president whom, according to an excerpt secured by The Guardian, Hunter called a “vile man with a vile mission.”
“He [Trump] pushed debunked conspiracy theories about work I did in Ukraine and China, even as his own children had pocketed millions in China and Russia and his former campaign manager sat in a jail cell for laundering millions more from Ukraine,” Hunter claimed in his book according to one of the excerpts.
The president’s son went on to accuse Trump of “corrupt behavior” while insisting the former president wanted to destroy him and his father.
“[He] believed that if he could destroy me, and by extension my father, he could dispatch any candidate of decency from either party, all while diverting attention from his own corrupt behavior.”
In the memoir, Hunter also takes aim at Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump as he insists that he fell and rose on his own as he “worked for someone other” than his father.
Among other bombshell allegations, Hunter insisted that Senator Lindsey Graham became Trump’s “lapdog” right before his eyes while calling Representative Matt Gaetz a “troll.”
Besides attacking his political foes, Hunter also opened up about his private struggles as he recalled the time he bought cocaine on the street and invited a drug dealer to move in with him.
“I’ve bought crack cocaine on the streets of Washington, D.C., and cooked up my own inside a hotel bungalow in Los Angeles. I’ve been so desperate for a drink that I couldn’t make the one-block walk between a liquor store and my apartment without uncapping the bottle to take a swig,” he wrote according to another excerpt obtained by The New York Times.
Concluding his book, Hunter boasts of sobriety and the life he managed to forge together with his second wife despite all the setbacks he suffered along the way.
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