Donald Trump fell out with Chris Christie, a new book reveals, by screaming at him: 'You know my number, just give it to the President, I don't want your f***ing phone'.

Trump became furious on election night when the New Jersey governor offered to use his own mobile phone to take a congratulatory call from Barack Obama.

As a germophobe he was also horrified at the idea of having Christie's phone next to his face.

According to a new book Trump's former campaign manager Paul Manafort was forced out under circumstances that were just as bruising.

The President shouted at him: 'Am I a f***ing baby, Paul?' over a news report which said Trump's advisers did TV interviews to get his attention because he watches so much cable.

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Fall-out: When Trump and Christie appeared at the Manhattan election night rally which became a victory party, they had fallen out over whose cellphone would be used for the call from President Obama

Downcast: Chris Christie's demeanor on election night should have been upbeat, but he had just fallen out with the newly-victorious president-elect over trying to make the victor take a call from Obama on Christie's personal cell phone, a new book reveals

Soon after Manafort was dispatched by Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner, one of the President's advisers, who said he was announcing his resignation in a press release - that he was sending out in 30 seconds.

The insight into the cutthroat Trump campaign is in 'Devil's Bargain: Steve Bannon, Donald Trump and the Storming of the Presidency', which is out tomorrow (Tues) on Penguin Press.

The book is an account of the rise of Bannon, from his blue collar upbringing in Virginia through to founder of Breitbart, the right wing media company, and now the President's chief strategist.

According to 'Devil's Bargain', Bannon helped shape Trump's nationalist and anti-immigrant worldview which has crystallized into the phrase: 'America First'.

But some of its most revealing passages detail the tension in Trump's camp and how major players were kicked out.

Author Joshua Green, a senior national correspondent for Bloomberg Businessweek, writes that Christie had run against Trump for the Republican Presidential candidacy but quit in February last year after the New Hampshire primary.

The next month he shocked the Republican establishment by endorsing Trump and began leading his White House transition team.

According to 'Devil's Bargain', Trump was in his War Room on election night when it started to look like he would pull of his shock victory.

The book says that 'although he was surrounded by friends, aides and family members, there seemed to be a force field around him that discouraged a direct approach'.

Friends started congratulating Mike Pence instead and saluting him as 'Mr Vice President'.

Trump sat down to 'absorb the gravity of what was happening' and a moment later Christie 'burst through the force field and sat next to him'.

Christie said: 'Hey Donald. The President talked to me earlier' - the two had gotten to know each other after Superstorm Sandy. Christie said: 'If you win he's going to call my phone, and I'll pass it over to you'.

Trump 'flashed a look of annoyance, clearly resenting the intrusion' and was repulsed by the idea of having somebody else's phone next to his face.

Trump told Christie: 'Hey Chris, you know my f***ing phone number. Just give it to the President. I don't want your f***ing phone'.

Out: Paul Manafort was sacked over revelations in the New York Times about his business dealings - which even his wife did not know about - but had already been on the receiving end of an f-word rant from Trump

The way they were: Trump had made Christie his transition team leader and the New Jersey governor seemed to be assured of a role in the administration - but when they argued about a phone aides saw that Christie had made the 'ultimate mistake'

Aides said that Christie's move was the 'ultimate mistake' and one from which he 'wouldn't recover'.

It was Bannon who broke the news that Trump had won and told him: 'Hey, look, we're gonna win this thing'.

Trump nodded and said: 'Let's go get this done', referring to his victory speech - because he did not have one.

Previous theories about Christie's fall from grace had included the governor pushing his way into photos of Trump on election night.

There were also concerns about his role in the Bridgegate scandal, in which his advisers got revenge on a Democratic mayor of Fort Lee, New Jersey, by causing traffic chaos there.

After election night Christie was removed from his role in charge of the Presidential transition by Kushner, who has a grudge against him because he prosecuted his father in 2005 when he was New Jersey Attorney General.

Recently Christie has been enveloped in 'Beachgate', where reporters took pictures of him lounging on a New Jersey beach that he had closed due to a state government shutdown.

Manafort was hired by Trump as a campaign adviser last March but five months later, by which time he was the campaign manager, he was already out of favor.

The final straw was when the New York Times published a scathing article titled: 'Inside the Failing Mission to Tame Donald Trump's Tongue' which claimed aides were using TV interviews to give him their message rather than face to face meetings.

Rebekah Mercer, part of the family which had spent $3.4 million on Trump's campaign, told him that 'this thing is over if you don't make a change fast'.

Trump admitted: 'It's bad' but Mercer told him: 'No, it's not bad - it's over, unless you make a change'.

She told him to bring in Bannon and Kellyanne Conway, a pollster and PR executive, and Trump agreed.

The following day at the National Golf Club in Bedminster, New Jersey, Trump assembled his staff: Christie, former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani, former Fox News chief executive Roger Ailes, Manafort and his deputy Rick Gates.

Kushner and Trump's daughter Ivanka were away on a yachting trip in Croatia.

Trump shouted at Manafort: 'How can anybody allow an article that says your campaign is all f***ed up?

'You think you've gotta go on TV to talk to me? You treat me like a baby!

'Am I like a baby to you? I sit there like a little baby and watch TV and you talk to me? Am I a f***ing baby, Paul?'

The room 'fell silent', 'Devil's Bargain' says.

Manafort's dismissal was hastened by a New York Times article that ran the next day saying that he had been paid $12.7 million from a pro Russian party from Ukraine.

Manafort had not only kept this secret from Trump but he had not even told his wife who 'leaped up from the couch in fury' when she she found out, the book claims.

Aides said that the story was the 'kill shot' for Manafort and that later that week when Kushner returned from vacation he told him:: 'We've really got a problem here. You're going to have to step down'.

Manafort objected because it would 'look like I'm guilty', the book says.

Executioner: Jared Kushner was used to get rid of both Christie and Manafort, the new book about the rise of Steve Bannon reveals

Who's not got one of those? The book has already been revealed to lift the lid on Steve Bannon's portrait in his home - of the Emperor Napoleon

Kushner pressed him and said it 'would be helpful if you stepped down'.

Manafort resisted and said: 'Yes, but I can't do that'.

The book says: 'At this Kushner's demeanour hardened and he glanced at his watch. 'We're putting out a press release at 9am that says you've resigned. That's in 30 seconds'.

Manafort is now one of several Trump aides who are being investigated by Special Prosecutor Robert Mueller over their dealings with Russia, as is Kushner and Trump's son Donald Jr.

The issue has come to dominate Trump's Presidency and Hillary Clinton's vice presidential running mate Tim Kaine has said that Donald Jr could be guilty of treason for meeting a Russian lawyer who promised him dirt on the Democratic candidate.

Jeff Sessions was the first Senator to endorse Trump in August 2015 but 'Devil's Bargain' says that Bannon had to convince him it was the right move.

Fourteen months earlier Sessions had been denied the chairmanship of the Senate Budget Committee - he was the ranking member - and he thought it was punishment for his nationalist views on immigrants.

Sessions, who had toyed with running himself on an anti-immigrant platform spent hours on the phone with Bannon seeking reassurance that Trump could win.

Bannon told him that Trump could '100 per cent' become the President so long as he could 'stick to your message and personify this stuff, there's not a doubt in my mind'.

Sessions told him: 'If I do this endorsement and it doesn't work, it's the end of my career in the Republican Party'.

Bannon told him: 'It's do or die. This is it, this is the moment'. He also reminded him that the South could deliver Trump the votes he needed to win.

Sessions told him: 'Okay, I'm all-in. But if he doesn't win, it's over for me'.

One of Trump's signature policies is his vow to build a wall on the border with Mexico and make them pay for it.

Yet Trump did not actually come with the idea; his former aide Sam Nunberg said that it was actually him and Roger Stone, the political operative who has long been friends with Trump.

Nunberg says in the book that they both talked to Bannon about it and agreed it was a good way to get make sure Trump talked about immigration.

The book says that Trump was 'indifferent' to it originally but tried it out at the Iowa Freedom Summit, an event put on by his advisers, in January 2015. Nunberg said that when Trump made his pledge to build the wall 'the place went nuts' and so it stayed.

In extracts of the book already made public Green writes that Bannon owns a painting of himself that is in the style of a famous portrait of Napoleon.

The painting is based on the portrait by Jaques-Louis David of the French emperor and was given to him by Nigel Farage, the former leader of the UK Independence Party, which backed Brexit in the UK

The book also says that Bannon once described NBC TV host Megyn Kelly as 'pure evil' and told Ailes to 'go f*** yourself' through his lawyer when the two clashed over the presenter whilst she was with Fox.

Devil's Bargain: Steve Bannon, Donald Trump and the Storming of the Presidency, is published on July 18, 2017 and is available for pre-order on Amazon.