At the end of the first season of his reality TV show The Apprentice, Donald Trump’s choice of a winner was a matter of black and white.
And according to a former producer, Trump did not mince words about who the winner would be. In an essay for Slate, Bill Pruitt recalls how Trump, just as brash and whiny decades ago as he is now, openly used the N-word to refer to the first season’s Black finalist and was dead set against crowning him the victor.
The contestant in question was Kwame Jackson, a Black Wall Street banker who worked at Goldman Sachs, Pruitt writes. In the final episode of season one, Jackson was pitted against Bill Rancic, a white entrepreneur from Chicago who owned a cigar business, and they were tasked with managing two separate events at Trump properties. Pruitt writes that while the producers were legally barred from telling Trump which contestant to choose as winner, they skirted a Federal Communications Commission penalty by having weekly backroom sessions with the billionaire, all recorded on tape, in which they weighed the pros and cons of each.
While discussing Jackson’s and Rancic’s performance in the final task of the show, Pruitt writes, assistant judge Carolyn Kepcher subtly began to advocate in Jackson’s favor. She told Trump she’d seen Jackson overcome more obstacles in his task than Rancic did, especially in the way he managed Omarosa Manigault Newman, who was at that point another contestant who’d already been eliminated.
“I think Kwame would be a great addition to the organization,” Kepcher told Trump outright, according to Pruitt.
But the billionaire apparently wasn’t buying it. Trump, resisting Kepcher’s open praise of Jackson, is described by Pruitt as “wincing” multiple times while trying to draw out Jackson’s weaknesses.
“Why didn’t he just fire her?” Trump asked his advisers, referring to Omarosa.
“That’s not his job,” one producer responded, “that’s yours.
“I don’t think he knew he had the ability to do that,” Kepcher added.
“Yeah,” Trump conceded, in Pruitt’s telling, “but, I mean, would America buy a n—– winning?”
The rest of the room was stunned by Trump’s casual use of the slur, and in Pruitt’s telling, they all struggled to process what they had just heard. Pruitt writes that he was shocked that Trump was serious and so direct about not selecting Jackson as the winner frankly because he was Black—and that Trump seemed to have no reservations about letting the N-word fly in a meeting recorded on tape.
Over the years, several people who have crossed paths with Trump have alleged that they heard him use the N-word, including Omarosa, who wrote in her 2018 memoir that there were multiple instances during the filming of The Apprentice in which Trump was caught on tape muttering the word. Although Omarosa did not claim to hear Trump say the word herself, she swore that the tapes were real. In 2020, Mary Trump, the former president’s niece, told Rachel Maddow that she too had heard her uncle use the N-word, as well as “antisemitic slurs.” (Pruitt also describes an eyebrow-raising exchange with a Jewish contestant in which Trump asked him if he believed in the “genetic pool.”)
Pruitt’s new disclosure appears to be the first time someone in Trump’s proximity both claims to have heard him use the N-word and alleges that there is evidence to prove it. Trump, of course, has claimed the recordings don’t exist—but if the tapes are real, they could put the rumors to rest for good.
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