Scaramucci Says He'll 'Kill Trump, No Question' During A Game Of 'F**k, Marry, Kill'
Donald Trump's former White House communications director Anthony Scaramucci is not fond of his ex-boss.
Scaramucci, who served just 11 days in the White House before being fired by Trump, chose to "kill" the former president and current presumptive Republican presidential nominee during a game of "F**k, Marry, Kill" this week, Page Six reported.
During a panel talk with "Shark Tank" star Kevin O'Leary at the Faena Forum in Miami, the 60-year-old financier was asked to choose who he would "F**k, Marry, Kill" between figures in the Trump administration.
Scaramucci reportedly answered, "Kill Trump. No question."
He then clarified, "And now the Secret Service is gonna come get me because I said that... I'm saying it metaphorically; I'm playing a game."
Scaramucci went on to declare, "I want to f**k myself."
The SkyBridge investment firm founder then chose former Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin when it came to who he would marry in the Trump administration.
Explaining his choice, Scaramucci said, "He's got a lot of dough, and I understand he would take really good care of me."
O'Leary and Scaramucci's panel talk was held as part of a members-only event known as Faena Rose Club and was set up like a bout in a fake boxing ring.
Faena Rose president Pablo De Ritis introduced O'Leary and Scaramucci, describing the former as "the Ozempic-lean, mean, profit-making machine. Your Royal Highness of Royalties."
Meanwhile, Scaramucci was introduced as "standing a not-so-tall 5-foot-5 inches when wearing Governor DeSantis's heels, and ready to rumble."
The Faena Forum members voted Scaramucci as the winner of the "fight," causing the "Shark Tank" star to ask for a rematch.
Scaramucci was ousted from the White House in July 2017 just 10 days after Trump named him White House communications chief.
The firing came after he launched a tirade against several members of the Trump administration and threatened to fire his own staff during an interview with The New Yorker.
Scaramucci reportedly called former White House chief of staff Reince Priebus a "paranoid schizophrenic" and a "paranoiac."
He also reportedly said that unlike Trump's then-chief strategist Steve Bannon, he wasn't seeking media attention.
"I'm not Steve Bannon, I'm not trying to suck my own c**k," Scaramucci told the magazine at the time.
Last year, Scaramucci predicted that Trump would eventually end his 2024 presidential campaign due to his legal woes, which he believed were making the former president "stressed."
"I think he ends up eventually dropping out of the race," Scaramucci told "NewsNation." "I don't think he makes it to the Iowa caucus."
However, not only did Trump win in the Iowa caucuses, he also officially crossed the threshold of 1,215 delegates to be considered the Republican Party's presumptive presidential nominee, the Associated Press reported.
Amid his campaign, Trump faces four separate indictments, including one related to his alleged hush-money payments to adult film star Stormy Daniels in exchange for her silence on their alleged affair.
Trump has denied the allegations of falsifying business records and insisted there was no affair.
His New York hush money trial will start on March 25.