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LONDON — President-elect Donald Trump tweeted at the wrong Ivanka on Monday night, and the British woman on the receiving end of his praise has hit back.

Trump had quoted a tweet praising his daughter Ivanka, but the account mentioned in the tweet belongs to Ivanka Majic, a digital consultant from the British seaside town of Brighton.

Majic responded to the president-elect on Tuesday morning with a tweet of her own: “And you’re a man with great responsibilities. May I suggest more care on Twitter and more time learning about #climatechange.”

And you're a man with great responsibilities. May I suggest more care on Twitter and more time learning about #climatechange. pic.twitter.com/kBMEGZYtig — Ivanka Majic (@ivanka) January 17, 2017

Majic said she saw Trump’s Twitter blunder as an opportunity.

“The interesting thing about my being dragged into a Twitter conversation with Trump is that my politics are very different than his,” Majic said.

‘Wrong Ivanka’ wakes to thousands of Twitter messages

The case of mistaken Twitter identity began when Trump quoted another user’s praise for his daughter.

“@Ivanka Trump is great, a woman with real character and class,” read the tweet Trump shared from Massachusetts chiropractor Lawrence Goodstein, whose account has since been changed to private.

Goodstein mistakenly used the handle @Ivanka instead of @IvankaTrump. It’s not a huge error for a Twitter user with fewer than 100 followers, but when Trump re-tweeted it to his audience of more than 20 million, the message triggered a Twitter storm.

It was shared more than 5,000 times, favorited more than 30,000 times and garnered more than 8,000 replies.

All this while Majic was sleeping.

Majic, a researcher for Brighton and Hove City Council who has also worked for Britain’s Labour Party, said she and her husband were awoken at 6 a.m. by calls and text messages from the media.

“It’s not every morning, well it’s never really, that I wake up and find that lots of international news agencies want to talk to me,” Majic said. “I had many, many mentions. I normally try to reply politely, but I’m not going to be able to get back to everyone today.”

Majic is not a frequent Twitter user, with just a handful of tweets in the past week.

Just four days ago Majic had tweeted a link to a news story in Brighton’s local paper about the coastal town’s “thriving food scene,” commenting, “Made the local paper. Fame at last!”

The Twitter chaos seemed to go unnoticed by the incoming first daughter, who shared a photo of herself with the hashtag #datenight with her 2.74 million followers.