Treasury Secretary Scott Besent fired back at Larry Summers for former Treasury Secretary late on Sunday night Criticism The law to tax and spend on a large scale of President Trump.
In a thread on the X, Besent demanded a summer forgiveness to compare the deaths, which predict some estimates that the bill was reported to be fatal that resulted in a result of health care that was reported after destruction Flood in central texas,
“Today, former Treasury Secretary @Lhsummers showed why he was forced to step as president of @Harvard: Lack of humanity and decision,” Bessent Written in a post On the social stage.
He condemned the “shocking callus interview” of the summer on the “this week” of ABC News on Sunday, during which Samars cited the estimate of the Yale Budget Lab, saying that the bill “will kill 100,000 people more than 10 years,” the bill.
“It is a 2,000 -day death as we saw in Texas later this week,” Summers said in an interview. “In my 70 years, I was never embarrassed for my country on 4 July.”
Trump signed his agenda-setting law in the law on 4 July, on the same day Texas experienced a terrible flood, which killed about 90 people-a death toll that experts say it is expected to grow.
Besant condemned the comment and called him to apologize.
“It is immense using a terrible situation in Texas for cheap political gains,” Besent added to his thread. “They have converted a human tragedy into a political cudgel. Such comments are fecles and deeply aggressive.”
“Professor Summer should immediately release a public apology for his toxic language,” Besent said, “To join me, urge institutions associated with summer associated institutions to join me.”
“If he is reluctant or unable to accept the cruelty of his comment, he should consider the example of Harvard and formed the basis of his unacceptable rhetoric for dismissal,” said Besant.
The hill has reached summer for comment.
Bessent’s comment comes after summer, in an interview, printed against the President’s legacy-defined law.
Summers said in an interview on Sunday, “There is no economist anywhere without a strong political agenda, who is saying that this bill is positive for the economy. And the heavy view is that it is probably going to make the economy worse.”
“Think about it in this way,” he continued. “How long can the world’s largest debtor remain the largest power in the world? And in the terms of the dollar, it is accumulating more loans on the economy than any piece of tax law that we have anytime.”