Over the weekend, instead of reporting on the Puerto Rico relief efforts and how they were crippled by circumstance, the liberal media chose to champion the anti-Trump criticism from Democratic San Juan Mayor Carmen Yulin Cruz. After President Trump pushed back against the criticism, the media sensed blood in the water and went all in. On Sunday’s Good Morning America, ABC Correspondent David Wright touted public outrage at the President, including one actor claiming Trump was going to Hell.

Part way through his report highlighting anti-Trump criticism over his Puerto Rico response, Wright raised up the scathing tweet written by Lin-Manuel Miranda, best known for his work on the Broadway musical Hamilton. “And playwright Lin-Manuel Miranda tweeted: ‘She has been working 24/7. You have been golfing. You're going straight to Hell. Fastest golf cart you ever took,’” Wright read with excitement. He failed to clarify that Trump had been D.C. coordinating with Puerto Rico’s governor.

Miranda had been a vocal opponent of the President for some time. On one occasion, during a Hamilton performance, he took the time to harangue Vice President Mike Pence because he was in the audience. So the irony went right over Wright’s head when he dismissed Trump’s accusation that Mayor Cruz’s criticism was political:

Trump suggested her criticism of the administration's response is politically motivated, tweeting: “The mayor of San Juan who was very complimentary only a few days ago, has now been told by the Democrats that you must be nasty to Trump.”

And it was no surprise whose corner Wright would place himself in for the report. During his lead into the segment, he asserted Trump was the one who started the argument. “The President's getting ready to head down to Puerto Rico this week. But, the fight he picked with one local official after she dared to criticize the administration's response ensures that the trip could be politically fraught,” he bemoaned.

In a series of tweets, President Trump told the people of Puerto Rico that the federal government was doing everything in its power to help them and urged them not to believe the “fake news.” Wright mocked Trump, explaining that “Of course, the reality of the situation is that most of the people in Puerto Rico will not be watching the news because they don't have power.”

Wright wrapped up his report by once again praising Miranda’s tweet: “Well, the President is taking a drubbing online for what people are saying is attacking storm victims, including that strongly worded tweet from Lin-Manuel Miranda.”

Transcript below: