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Donald Trump retweets critic calling him a ‘fascist’

Click to play video: 'Trump cites ‘fake news’ as media question Charlottesville condemnation'
Trump cites ‘fake news’ as media question Charlottesville condemnation
WATCH: Trump cites ‘fake news’ as media question Charlottesville condemnation – Aug 14, 2017

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump appears to have mistakenly retweeted a message from one of his critics saying “he’s a fascist.”

Trump deleted his retweet Tuesday after about five minutes, but not before the message sent to his 35 million followers racked up a big response.

Screenshot of @MikeHolden42 Twitter feed.

Trump seems to have been trying to draw attention to a Fox & Friends article on a possible presidential pardon for former Phoenix-area Sheriff, Joe Arpaio, who is facing a criminal contempt of court case involving immigration patrols.

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Screenshot of Donald Trump’s Twitter feed.

A Twitter handle identified as @MikeHolden42 tweeted to Trump “He’s a fascist, so not unusual.” The user suggested in subsequent tweets that he was calling Trump a facist, not Arpaio.

WATCH: Anger over Charlottesville response follows President Trump back to New York
Click to play video: 'Anger over Charlottesville response follows President Trump back to New York'
Anger over Charlottesville response follows President Trump back to New York

Trump retweeted the message to his massive following, triggering an avalanche of replies. @Mike Holden42 responded: “I’m announcing my retirement from Twitter. I’ll never top this RT.” He later updated his description on Twitter as “Officially Endorsed by the President of the United States.”

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On Tuesday, Trump also retweeted and deleted a cartoon showing a train labeled “Trump” running over a man with “CNN” covering his face Monday morning.

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The retweets come after a national uproar over race-fueled clashes in Charlottesville, Virginia. It took two days of public equivocation and internal White House debate before the president condemned white supremacist groups by name on Monday, declaring “racism is evil.”

Late Monday, Trump had retweeted Jack Posobiec, a conservative Trump supporter who used social media to draw attention to “pizzagate,” an unfounded conspiracy theory that claims Democrats harbour child sex slaves at a pizza restaurant.

Posobiec’s tweet read: “Meanwhile: 39 shootings in Chicago this weekend, 9 deaths. No national media outrage. Why is that?”

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