Donald Trump during a meeting at the White House on Monday. Kevin Lamarque/Reuters

President Donald Trump vented his frustration with the press and the courts in a series of tweets Tuesday morning in which he accused both institutions of deliberately undermining his agenda.

The tweets reflected the president's well-known opinions on the news media and the federal court system, each a repeat target of his online attacks.

At 6:35 a.m. ET on Tuesday, Trump accused the news media of publishing intentionally inaccurate stories about him and his administration in service of an "agenda of hate."

While not citing any specific articles or evidence of falsehoods, he followed up an hour later with an attack on the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals, which on Monday became the second federal appeals court to rule against his administration's blocked executive order seeking to limit travel to the US from several majority-Muslim countries.

The court rested its decision in part on a tweet that Trump posted on June 5 in which he argued that the US needed a "travel ban" targeting certain "dangerous countries" to protect national security. The appeals court ruled that the ban unlawfully discriminated against people on the basis of their nationality and that the government did not show that these people would harm US interests.

On Tuesday, Trump said the court's decision was expected, and he ended his tweet on the subject with "S.C.," presumably an abbreviation for the Supreme Court. Earlier this month, the administration appealed the 4th Circuit's May decision against the ban to the Supreme Court.

Trump moved on to his former presidential opponent Hillary Clinton in his next tweet, accusing former Attorney General Loretta Lynch of giving Clinton a "free pass and protection" during the investigation into her use of a private email server during her tenure as secretary of state.

Moving back to the media, Trump called for an apology from the press for its "incorrect" stories and said fake news was at "an all time high," though he again did not cite examples. And in another tweet concerning his Tuesday trip to Wisconsin, he commended the "Real News" for covering his administration's job-creation efforts.

In another morning message, the president wrote that Obamacare, the healthcare law officially known as the Affordable Care Act, had entered a "death spiral." As evidence, Trump cited a misleading statistic that 2 million Americans "just dropped out" of the program and argued that "Obstructionist Democrats" were preventing Republicans from repealing and replacing the law.

Trump mischaracterized a report published by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services this week that found that 2 million people since January had not paid for Obamacare insurance plans for which they had signed up. Many of those people most likely aged into Medicare or began receiving insurance coverage through an employer.