If Michael Wolff is to be believed, “100 percent of the people around” Donald Trump don’t think he’s fit for office. “They all say he is like a child . . . it’s all about him,” Wolff said during an interview in early January, adding, “They say he’s a moron, an idiot.” In the past week, the whisperings gathered by Wolff seem to have been confirmed, or at least validated, by a handful of leaked comments by Trump staffers from before they joined the White House. The most recent: a New York report published Monday detailing a series of messages sent by White House Principal Deputy Press Secretary Raj Shah while he was still working for the Republican National Committee.

In the messages, Shah reportedly called Trump a “deplorable” and celebrated the release of the Access Hollywood tape as “some justice.” The White House defended Shah as a “talented operative and skilled communicator” who had already disclosed the messages, and Shah himself appeared on Fox Business to say that Trump had eventually “won [him] over.” But by then, Shah had joined the ranks of a list that’s likely to grow over time—as one White House adviser told New York’s Olivia Nuzzi, “You hear them say things like, I’m serving the country” . . . “That’s code for, I hate the fucker.”

Scott Pruitt

Back in February 2016, Pruitt, who is currently under investigation for potential abuse of taxpayer dollars, was (like Shah) a Jeb Bush supporter. On February 4, the Environmental Protection Agency head reportedly told a local Oklahoma radio station that Trump “would be more abusive to the Constitution than Barack Obama—and that’s saying a lot.” In a subsequent interview on February 11, Pruitt added that Trump would be “an empty vessel when it comes to things like the Constitution and rule of law,” and that he was “very concerned that perhaps if [Trump is] in the White House, that there may be a very blunt instrument as the voice of the Constitution.” (In a statement rebutting the claims, Pruitt, like Shah, said his opinions had changed after meeting Trump, whom he now called “the most consequential leader of our time.”)

Rex Tillerson

The secretary of State allegedly called Trump a “moron,” and spent months thereafter dismissing rumors that he was stepping down, but neither confirmed nor denied the rumor. “I’m not going to deal with petty stuff like that,” he told reporters at the time.

H.R. McMaster

Back in November, the National Security Adviser reportedly called Trump an “idiot” and a “dope” during a private dinner, where he also allegedly took swipes at Jared Kushner. The general denied both claims.

Tom Barrack Jr.

According to Wolff’s Fire and Fury, Barrack, a fellow billionaire and one of Trump’s closest associates, reportedly told a friend that Trump was “not only crazy—he’s stupid.” Barrack denied the comments, though as one of the few people in the Trump orbit safely ensconced outside the White House, there’s certainly more where that came from.

Gary Cohn

If Wolff is right, the National Economic Council director’s suffering may go deeper than even outward appearances suggest. Per Wolff, an e-mail “purporting to represent the views of Gary Cohn” circulated the White House in April and read, in part: