
Happy Birthday, President Lincoln! pic.twitter. His leadership brought us together his legacy inspires us still. Trump said: After having written many best selling books, and somewhat. While there weren’t any typos, President Trump took part in another social-media gaffe on Sunday. An inauguration portrait of President Donald Trump was pulled from the Library of Congress store after social media users pointed out an egregious typo on Sunday, February 12. In July she also took great delight in highlighting a typo in Donald Trump’s tweet, which boasted about writing ability. It isn’t known if any of the 16.95 prints that were sold prior to the typo being caught have been recalled. Library of Congress has taken down page selling it. President Trump official inauguration poster has a typo. As the Daily News notes, the same print is available from the site Celebrating America, without the typo - and it’s cheaper! The print, with the obvious to/too typo, was on sale through Sunday night. It comes after Trump’s team was forced to pull his official inauguration poster after a typo in the quote, in the latest gaffe for his administration team. The Hill reports that the page featuring the print was pulled between 9:30 and 10:00 p.m. Though the description aptly notes that the portrait “captures the essence of Donald Trump’s campaign for the presidency of the United States,” this isn’t a case of the Library of Congress going rogue. aTJtBys7hQ- Steve Kopack February 13, 2017 Trump's official "inauguration print", currently on sale through the Library of Congress website, has a typo. Nothing we want for the future is beyond our reach.” Now the Library of Congress has been caught selling an inauguration print with the following quote from President Trump: “No dream is too big, no challenge is to great.

Then, on Sunday morning, the Department of Education tweeted a tribute to W.E.B. President Donald Trumps official inauguration poster offered by the Library of Congress had a noticeable typo on it, where the word to was printed instead. It also repeatedly misspelled attacker as attaker. On Monday the Trump administration released a list of 78 terrorist attacks that included Denmakr instead of Denmark and San Bernadino rather than San Bernardino. Four years later, the Trump administration has produced or inspired so many egregious typos that it’s hard to keep track. Back in 2012, Mitt Romney’s campaign released an app that included the typo “A BETTER AMERCIA,” and this was considered proof that he was hopelessly gaffe-prone.
