In some lucky cases, Trump crams all three jabs into one epithet.
Trump used this nickname at his first address to the United Nations in September 2017.
He continued to use the name in tweets and at other political events.

Many argued that the ex-POTUS was goading North Korea into a nuclear battle.
Per Schmidt’s reporting, Trump wanted to blame the attack on a different country (viaNBC).
The ex-POTUS released a statement (and a new moniker for McConnell) through his spokesperson Liz Harrington.

Meanwhile, McConnell has said he doesn’t mind the nickname.
Evidence of Warren claiming Native American ancestry on professional documents first began circulating in 2012.
This would prove to be all the fodder Trump needed to make a nickname for his political opponent.

I promise you I’ll do this.
I will take you know those little kits they sell on television for $2.
But in the end, both of them ate crow (and not the Mitch McConnell kind).

Ron DeSanctimonious
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell isn’t the only friend-turned-foe to former President Donald Trump.
I got him past two races.
I got him past the primary because he was losing by 30 points or more.

It’s a loyalty [question].
I’m a big loyalist.
He came to me, let’s say weeping, because he was dead.

As soon as I endorsed him, he won the primary, it was over."
I mean, we’d go with that.
That’s fine" (via Newsweek).
As the then-presidential hopeful slowly began reintegrating traditional in-person events, Trumptweetedthat September, “Great!
Biden is finally being forced out of his basement.
Now you’ll be able to see what is going on ‘up there.’
He may do some ‘limited’ campaigning.
Basement Biden is no longer playing well in the Polls!”
And we don’t doubt there are plenty more where those came from.