Malik Obama, the half-brother of President Barack Obama, posing for photographs in the village of Kogelo in western Kenya in 2012. AP/Ben Curtis Donald Trump is continuing the trend of hosting controversial guests at presidential debates by inviting President Barack Obama's estranged half-brother Malik to Wednesday night's event, the New York Post reported.

Malik, who is a Trump supporter, will join the GOP nominee as a guest in Las Vegas on Wednesday at the third and final debate.

"I look very much forward to meeting and being with Malik," Trump said. "He gets it far better than his brother."

Obama's half-brother, who was born in Kenya but now lives in Washington, DC, is an outspoken critic of the president. He has also blamed Hillary Clinton for bungling conflicts in the Middle East during her tenure as secretary of state.

In the New York Post interview, Malik dismissed the allegations of several women accusing Trump of sexual misconduct.

"I don't believe them," Malik said. "Why didn't they come forward before?"

In a July interview with Reuters, Malik announced he would be voting for Trump in the presidential election.

Trump has a history of inviting guests from his opponents past to the presidential debates.

At the first presidential debate in September, Trump threatened to invite Gennifer Flowers — a woman with whom former President Bill Clinton admitted to having an affair.

Trump upped the ante again at the second debate by holding a press conference with several women who accused Bill Clinton of sexual misconduct decades before.