Joe Bidens granddaughter Naomi slams new Jake Tapper book as political fairy smut day after prez announced cancer diagnosis

Former President Joe Biden’s eldest granddaughter ripped into Jake Tapper’s new book about the 82-year-old Democrat’s mental decline in office, labeling it “political fairy smut” on Monday.Naomi Biden, the 31-year-old daughter of Hunter Biden, went on a tirade against the CNN anchor and his co-author, Axios reporter Alex Thompson, a day after it was revealed the ex-president is suffering from prostate cancer.“Just read a copy of this silly book, and if anyone is curious for a review from someone who lived it first-hand: this book is political fairy smut for the permanent, professional chattering class,” she wrote on X.“The ones who rarely enter the arena, but profit from the spectacle of those that do.”She accused Tapper and Thompson of being “irresponsible self-promoting journalists out to make a quick buck” and called their work “a bunch of unoriginal, uninspired lies.”The book, “Original Sins,” chronicles Joe Biden’s mounting health struggles during his term in the White House and his inner circle’s attempt to cover up the decline.One passage of the book delves into how Biden apparently didn’t recognize actor and Democratic supporter George Clooney — in an incident that left the Hollywood star “shaken to his core.”Other parts of the book recall aides seriously considered putting Biden in a wheelchair and taking steps to ensure the president didn’t fall in public.Biden did not run for reelection after a rough debate performance last June.While the authors say they interviewed more than 200 people, Naomi Biden complained the book “relies on unnamed, anonymous sources pushing a self-serving false narrative that absolves them of any responsibility for our current national nightmare” in a reference to the Trump administration.“All of this at the expense of a man so completely good and honest that it is impossible for these people to ever understand the why or how of it all,” she insisted.
“There are real stories t...