President Trump Tuesday night responded to actress Bette Midler’s "apology" for sharing a fake quote that she alleged Trump made in 1998 to People Magazine.

The quote, which was debunked as fake four years ago as MRCTV reported, went as follows:

If I were to run, I’d run as a Republican. They’re the dumbest group of voters in the country. They believe anything on Fox News. I could lie and they’d still eat it up. I bet my numbers would be terrific.

Trump took to Twitter on Tuesday, calling Midler a “washed-up psycho” who was “forced to apologize.”

“She got caught, just like the Fake News Media gets caught. A sick scammer!” he wrote.

Washed up psycho @BetteMidler was forced to apologize for a statement she attributed to me that turned out to be totally fabricated by her in order to make “your great president” look really bad. She got caught, just like the Fake News Media gets caught. A sick scammer! — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) June 5, 2019

After facing backlash for sharing the quote Sunday, Midler issued an apology on Monday, saying that she didn’t “know how I missed it, but it sounds SO much like him that I believed it was true!”

I apologize; this quote turns out to be a fake from way back in ‘15-16. Don’t know how I missed it, but it sounds SO much like him that I believed it was true! Fact Check: Did Trump say in '98 Republicans are dumb? https://t.co/NY9s6V49el via @rgj — Bette Midler (@BetteMidler) June 3, 2019

She followed up that so-called “apology” with another tweet blaming him for her sharing misinformation:

Yes, one must always check the quotes. That should take up, oh, maybe 23 of the 24 hours in the day? Because there are SO MANY LIES, most of them generated by Trump himself, that the task of separating the truth from the lies is impossible. Which is just how he likes it. #CHAOS — Bette Midler (@BetteMidler) June 3, 2019

Midler has since deleted her tweet with the fake quote, but not before the tweet was liked by more than 21,000 people and shared over 8,000 times, as MRCTV revealed.