President Trump poured gasoline on another smoldering cultural fire Saturday by giving voice to the flip side of the #MeToo movement.

“Peoples lives are being shattered and destroyed by a mere allegation,” Trump complained in a morning tweet spurred by the resignations of two staffers who were accused of domestic abuse.

“Some are true and some are false. Some are old and some are new. There is no recovery for someone falsely accused – life and career are gone. Is there no such thing any longer as Due Process?” Trump asked.

White House Staff Secretary Rob Porter resigned Wednesday as allegations of physical and emotional abuse from his two ex-wives emerged — charges that senior White House officials admitted they knew for months.

A second White House staffer, David Sorenson, a speechwriter for the Council on Environmental Quality, resigned Friday after his ex-wife went public with allegations of physical abuse during their marriage.

Porter, who worked closely with White House Chief of Staff John Kelly and has been dating Communications Director Hope Hicks, was unable to gain a security clearance after an FBI background check turned up a restraining order that one of the women took out against him.

Both Porter and Sorenson deny the charges.

“In fact, I was the victim of repeated physical violence during our marriage, not her,” Sorenson claimed in a lengthy statement, saying that he had become “a victim of today’s frightening new world of trial by media.”

Trump’s tweet drew immediate online outrage.

“Women’s lives are upended every day by sexual violence and harassment,” wrote Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA.). “I’m going to keep standing with them, and trusting them, even if the President won’t.”

“Why is it, Mr. @POTUS, that you never have a word for the victims?” asked Democratic political strategist David Axelrod.

Trump’s tweets also tapped into a quietly building backlash against #MeToo, which has encouraged women to go public with experiences of sexual abuse.

Women worried about unfair denunciations of men caught up in ambiguous he-said, she-said accusations are profiled by Katie Roiphe in the current issue of Harper’s magazine.

Roiphe’s sources are “so afraid of appearing politically insensitive that they wouldn’t put their names to their thoughts, and I couldn’t blame them,” she wrote.

Last week LeanIn, an organization that supports women in the workplace, sounded the alarm about a survey that #MeToo has made male managers more leery of working with female employees one-on-one.