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Donald Trump, in latest spelling gaffe, tweets that protests can help ‘heel’ divided U.S.

Click to play video: 'Trump attacks Republican senators on Twitter as fallout over Charlottesville response grows'
Trump attacks Republican senators on Twitter as fallout over Charlottesville response grows
WATCH: Trump attacks Republican senators on Twitter as fallout over Charlottesville response grows – Aug 17, 2017

U.S. President Donald Trump has taken plenty of flak this past week for his comments in the wake of violence at a white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Va., so on Saturday, he took to Twitter in an attempt to issue a rallying cry to Americans.

But he failed to put his best foot forward, misspelling the word “heal” twice – in two separate tweets – before finally getting it right on his third attempt.

RELATED: The ‘COVFEFE Act’: U.S. lawmaker wants to preserve Donald Trump’s tweets

“Our great country has been divided for decade. Sometimes you need protest in order to heel, and we will heel, and be stronger than ever before!” Trump tweeted. He then reworked the tweet, altering the word “decade” to “decades,” but failing to address the most glaring error in the message.

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A few minutes later, a third tweet was issued with the spelling mistake finally corrected, and the misspelled tweets deleted.

WATCH: Donald Trump gets a spelling lesson on Twitter

Click to play video: 'Donald Trump gets a spelling lesson on Twitter'
Donald Trump gets a spelling lesson on Twitter

Trump has long been criticized for failing to stamp out white supremacist voices lurking in his base, and those criticisms reached fever pitch after he blamed the Charlottesville violence “on many sides.”

He then appeared to show a willingness to tread more lightly, calling out neo-Nazis and white supremacists, but then insisted that the “alt-left” was as culpable as the alt-right.

READ MORE: Mother of woman killed in Charlottesville has ‘no interest’ in speaking with Donald Trump

Now, Trump’s latest attempts to tiptoe around the controversy and sound presidential appear to have done the opposite, fueling his detractors who appear to have gotten a kick out of his latest spelling gaffe.

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Here’s how Twitter reacted:

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