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Kim Kardashian: I have ‘nothing bad to say about’ Trump

Kim Kardashian West said on Monday night that she has “nothing bad to say” about President Trump after the two met earlier this year.

“I have nothing bad to say about the president. He has done something amazing,” the reality star said, recounting her visit to the White House in May during an appearance on “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” Monday night.

Kardashian West met with Trump to ask him to pardon Alice Johnson, a 62-year-old great-grandmother who was serving a life sentence without parole for her first nonviolent drug offense. 

“I knew that there was only one person in power who could make this change, who could get this woman out of prison, so I went for it,” Kardashian West told Kimmel.

She also said she unleashed a string of curses during her visit to the White House.

“Honestly, I walk in, and I look in, and I’m kinda star struck,” Kardashian West said. “Holy shit, what in the f—, the Oval Office! … Wait a minute, I’m really here.”

{mosads}Trump later commuted Johnson’s sentence in early June. 

Kardashian West told Kimmel she received a call from Trump after he commuted Johnson’s sentence during a photoshoot and that she was completely naked at the time.

“He called me. So, I was at a Steven Klein photoshoot. … So I’m naked, and I’m all glammed up, my phone rings, and I’m like, ‘Get me a robe!’ ” Kardashian West said.

“I was kinda bugging out during the shoot. I’m like, ‘Do I do this nude shoot? Do I not do this nude shoot?’ And I did it, and then I called Alice,” the star added.

Kimmel joked that Trump might’ve released the “whole prison” if she told him she were naked during the phone call. 

The reality show star also spoke about her husband’s relationship with the president.

When asked about Kanye West’s support for the president, the celebrity personality said to audience laughter, “Yeah, I think he really … uh, yeah.”

Kardashian West then said that while her husband doesn’t “necessarily agree” with the president’s policies, he likes how he became president when “everybody underestimated him.”