The Mooch moped after he got the boot.

One-time White House communications director Anthony Scaramucci retreated to a secluded office and broke into tears after President Trump fired him after just 10 days on the job, Omarosa Manigault Newman alleges in her new book.

Scaramucci was abruptly axed in the wake of giving a profanity-laced interview in which he derided several top administration officials.

“Donald called him in and said, ‘You have to go,’ ” Manigault Newman writes in “Unhinged: An Insider’s Account of the Trump White House.”


After his termination, Scaramucci, 54, walked into a “cubby-like office” and “started crying,” according to Manigault Newman.

“One of the assistants saw and heard the whole thing,” Manigault Newman writes. “She described it as ‘a girly cry.’ ”

Scaramucci did not respond to a request for comment from the Daily News.

Manigault Newman’s explosive tell-all tome, which hit the shelves Tuesday, paints Trump as a belligerent narcissist who frequently spews racially charged and misogynistic language.


The White House has vehemently pushed back against the book, blasting it as “riddled with lies and false accusations.”

The Trump campaign took it one step further Tuesday, announcing it’s filing for arbitration against Manigault Newman over allegedly violating a 2016 nondisclosure agreement.

But legal experts have thrown cold water on the arbitration claim, noting that while nondisclosure agreements would be legal and binding for a political campaign, such agreements would be unenforceable to keep White House employees quiet.

Manigault Newman worked on Trump’s campaign and later joined the White House as a senior communications official. She was fired in December 2017.