Former White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders is one of a handful of Trump officials who left on good terms. Even after her return to life as a private citizen, she's still playing defense for the president.

Speaking to Steve Hilton on Fox News Sunday night, Huckabee lashed out at the numerous reports that Trump requires his intelligence briefings reduced to one page per topic, including images and graphics. "I've watched this process play out so many times, sat in hundreds of meetings with the president, and the idea that he can only take in one or two bullets is absurd. I've watched him consume a massive amount of information, process it quickly, and make decisions," she said.

She continued: "He reads more than anybody I know. Every single foreign trip we actually would laugh about the fact he has boxes upon boxes, file boxes where he reads for hours. The rest of us want to take a break, we wanna sleep, the president works the entire time."

This is the same Trump who once claimed that "my primary consultant is myself" when it comes to foreign affairs. In 2017, The Washington Post reported that Trump told his subordinates that "he favors concise points boiled down to a single page," and "also has encouraged his briefers to include as many visual elements as possible."

Vice later reported that Trump received twice-daily briefings of 20- to 25-page documents that consisted of "screenshots of positive cable news chyrons (those lower-third headlines and crawls), admiring tweets, transcripts of fawning TV interviews, praise-filled news stories, and sometimes just pictures of Trump on TV looking powerful."

Sanders also spoke to The New York Times for a lengthy profile that came out Sunday, and along with dropping more hints that she may run for governor of Arkansas, she repeated her primary complaint from her time as press secretary: "I don’t like being called a liar."

Sanders drew criticism after the president fired former FBI director James Comey. Defending Trump's decision, she told reporters, "We’ve heard from countless members of the FBI" that Comey had lost the trust of the agency. That was a lie. When Sanders was interviewed by the FBI as part of Robert Mueller's investigation, she admitted that claim "was not founded on anything." She apologized, sort of, in an interview with George Stephanopoulos on Good Morning America, saying the comment was a "slip of the tongue" that she made "in the heat of the moment, meaning that it wasn’t a scripted talking point. I’m sorry I wasn’t a robot."

Despite her claims that she made a mistake in the heat of the moment, Sanders repeated the claim multiple times, doubling down when reporters asked her for clarification.