Getty Images
- President Donald Trump has long admired Oprah Winfrey, the much-beloved media mogul and self-made billionaire.
- In 1999, Trump even said Winfrey would be his top pick for a vice presidential running mate. In 2015, he defended that choice. "I think we'd win easily," he said.
- But as speculation about Winfrey's own political ambitions mount, Trump may be forced to change his tune about his former friend.
President Donald Trump has long admired Oprah Winfrey, the much-beloved media mogul and self-made billionaire. But that may change now that Winfrey is reportedly considering a 2020 presidential bid herself.
Trump has spoken glowingly of Winfrey over the last few decades, even telling TV host Larry King in 1999 that Winfrey would be his top pick for a vice presidential running mate, should he run.
"I love Oprah. Oprah would always be my first choice," Trump told King. "She's a terrific woman, she's somebody that's very special. If she'd do it, she'd be fantastic. She's popular, she's brilliant, she's a wonderful woman."
And in 2015, Trump again suggested he might pick Winfrey as his presidential running mate, telling ABC News's George Stephanopoulos that the two would "win easily" if they teamed up.
"I like Oprah, what can I tell you?" Trump said in the interview. "She's great, she's talented, she's a friend of mine, she's a good person. I've been on her show. … I like Oprah, is that supposed to be a bad thing? I'd love to have Oprah, I think we'd win easily, actually."
Trump has also publicly praised her on Twitter, tweeting in 2012 that he "adore[s]" Winfrey and calling her "terrific" in a 2013 tweet.
The president has appeared on Winfrey's long-running daytime talk show multiple times and 30 years ago, in 1988, discussed his possible presidential ambitions.
"I know people have talked to you about whether or not you want to run - would you ever?" Winfrey asked Trump.
Trump demurred, responding that he had no immediate plans to run for office, but went on to say that he would have "a hell of a chance of winning" because he, like many Americans, he argued, is frustrated by trade deals and foreign policy that he said disadvantaged the US.
"I probably wouldn't, but I do get tired with seeing what's happening with this country and if it got so bad I'd never want to rule it out totally," he said.
Trump went on to say that if he were elected president, "this country would make one hell of a lot of money from those people that for 25 years have taken advantage."
"It wouldn't be the way it's been, believe me," he said.