Donald Trump and Republicans express anger of comments by Hillary Clinton about his supporters
- Hillary Clinton expresses regrets for calling half of Donald Trump supporters âdeplorablesâ
- Clinton talks about Trumpâs praise of Vladmir Putin, calling it âunseemlyâ
- Trump: Iranians who harass the U.S. Navy âwill be shot out of the waterâ
- Trumpâs campaign says he didnât know his interview with Larry King would be aired on Russian television
Republicans pounce upon Clinton âdeplorablesâ remark. She apologizes. Sort of.
Republicans went on the attack Saturday after Hillary Clinton, during remarks at a fundraiser late Friday night, said that âyou could put half of [Donald] Trumpâs supporters into what I call the basket of deplorables,â which she referred to as âracist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, Islamophobic â you name it.â
In tweets, speeches and press statements, Trump, his running mate Mike Pence, and Republican officials accused Clinton of elitism and disrespect. Pence, the Indiana governor, said Clinton had insulted âhardworking Americans.â
The dueling statements increased the focus on racial and ethnic tension that already has dominated the 2016 campaign, often to Trumpâs detriment. This time, however, it was Republicans who thought their opponent had wandered into politically damaging territory.
Transcript: Clintonâs full remarks as she called half of Trump supporters âdeplorablesâ
Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton is under fire and has expressed regret for part of a statement she made about GOP nominee Donald Trumpâs supporters during a fundraiser on Friday.
Here is a full transcript of her remarks in New York City, with the controversial portion in bold:
âThank you all so much. Wow. Thank you. Thank you. Itâs sort of like the seventh inning stretch. Thank you all. You know, Iâve been saying at events like this lately, I am all that stands between you and the apocalypse. Tonight, Iâm all that stands between a much better outcome! I want to thank Laverne [Cox] for being here at her first political event. Her endorsement, her strong words, her passion, her example, her advocacy on behalf of the transgender community, particularly transgender women of color, is just so extraordinary, and I love the way she wove in so many of the issues that are up for grabs in this election.â
âI think we know what weâre up against. We do, donât we? Donald Trump has pledged to appoint Supreme Court justices who will overturn marriage equality, and if you have read about the ones he says heâs likely to support, heâs not kidding. In fact, if you look at his running mate, his running mate signed a law that would have allowed businesses to discriminate against LGBT Americans. And thereâs so much more than I find deplorable in his campaign: the way that he cozies up to white supremacists, makes racist attacks, calls women pigs, mocks people with disabilities -- you canât make this up. He wants to round up and deport 16 million people, calls our military a disaster. And every day he says something else which I find so personally offensive, but also dangerous. You know, the idea of our country is so rooted in continuing progress that we make together. Our campaign slogan is not just words. We really do believe that we are stronger together. We really do believe that showing respect and appreciation for one another lifts us all up.â
âAnd itâs a special commitment that I feel to continuing to fight alongside the LGBT community. Because this is one of the continuing struggles. Weâre filled in this great hall in Cipriani tonight with successful people, raising your glow sticks, thank you so much for contributing a little bit more to get the campaign over the finish line. But somewhere right now in this city is a kid has been kicked out of his house. Somewhere not far from here, maybe a suburb or across state lines, is a young girl who is just not sure what her future holds because she just doesnât feel like sheâs herself and no one understands that. Some kid getting off the bus at the Port Authority and somebodyâs waiting to take advantage of that scared but brave kid looking for a different life and a future that actually belongs to him or her.â
âWe still have a lot of work to do. And if you think of the work we have to do in our own country, it pales in comparison to the work we have to do around the world. And Iâm grateful that in this room are so many people who have broken down barriers, stood up to discrimination and bigotry, fought for the rights of everyone. I was in North Carolina just yesterday and I told them, itâs not only that discrimination is wrong. Itâs bad for business. That state which was led down a pathway of discrimination is seeing the results -- losing jobs, losing the NBA all-star game. Who wants to be associated with a governor and a legislature who set out to hurt the people theyâre supported to be representing and protecting?â
âIn too many places still, LGBT Americans are singled out for harassment and violence. You can get married on Saturday, post your pictures on Sunday and get fired on Monday. Thatâs why weâve got to continue the forward march of progress.â
âAnd we cannot do it alone. I cannot do it alone. Iâm not like Donald Trump, who says, âI alone can fix it.â Iâve never quite figured out what it is he alone can fix. But thatâs not what youâll hear from me. I think we have to do this together. So, together weâre gonna pass the Equality Act to guarantee full equality. Weâre going to put comprehensive quality affordable healthcare within reach for more people, including for mental health and addiction. Weâre going to take on youth homelessness, and as my wonderful, extraordinary, great daughter said, we are going to end the cruel and dangerous practice of conversion therapy. Weâre going to keep working toward an AIDS-free generation, a goal that I set as secretary of State, and with your help weâre going to pass comprehensive gun laws....â
âI know there are only 60 days left to make our case -- and donât get complacent, donât see the latest outrageous, offensive, inappropriate comment and think, well, heâs done this time. We are living in a volatile political environment. You know, to just be grossly generalistic, you could put half of Trumpâs supporters into what I call the basket of deplorables. Right? The racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, Islamaphobic -- you name it. And unfortunately there are people like that. And he has lifted them up. He has given voice to their websites that used to only have 11,000 people -- now 11 million. He tweets and retweets their offensive hateful mean-spirited rhetoric. Now, some of those folks -- they are irredeemable, but thankfully they are not America.â
âBut the other basket -- and I know this because I see friends from all over America here -- I see friends from Florida and Georgia and South Carolina and Texas -- as well as, you know, New York and California -- but that other basket of people are people who feel that the government has let them down, the economy has let them down, nobody cares about them, nobody worries about what happens to their lives and their futures, and theyâre just desperate for change. It doesnât really even matter where it comes from. They donât buy everything he says, but he seems to hold out some hope that their lives will be different. They wonât wake up and see their jobs disappear, lose a kid to heroin, feel like theyâre in a dead-end. Those are people we have to understand and empathize with as well.â
âAnd what I hope is that in addition to your extraordinary generosity, you will go to our website, hillaryclinton.com, or text to join at 47246 to see how else you can get involved.â
âAnd I want to echo what Chelsea said. We are trying to register 3 million more voters and get those voters to commit to vote. We will win if people turn out to vote. There is no doubt in my mind that we will win. But we canât take anyone or any place for granted. And therefore I am asking you to volunteer for a phone bank, for a canvass -- at the very least if you know anybody whoâs even thinking about voting for Trump, stage an intervention! That may be one conversion therapy I endorse. Just remember: Friends donât let friends vote for Trump.â
âSo weâre going to have a great night tonight because we are so blessed. You know, we all love this woman either from afar or luckily enough up close -- and for my family, itâs been up close. We know sheâs the great talent of our time. We know that remarkably sheâs had a No. 1 album in each of the last six decades. We know that. But we also feel and see her heart and her passion. And sheâs, of course, been a great ally and supporter of the LGBT community -- but of progressive causes and candidates, sheâs been on the front lines repeatedly, bravely, never giving up or giving in to all of the incoming criticism that any of us who stick our necks out often attract. So weâre in for a great treat tonight. I could not be happier, more grateful, or excited, than to introduce a woman of such extraordinary presence, that really just her first name -- spelled correctly -- is more than enough. Please welcome, Barbra Streisand!â
Snapshot from the campaign trail: Tim Kaine attends a football game in Virginia
Is Clintonâs âdeplorablesâ remark a repeat of Romneyâs â47%â comment? Maybe not
Republicans on Saturday seized upon a remark Hillary Clinton made that called half of Donald Trumpâs supporters âdeplorables,â arguing that it is a slander similar to one made by 2012 GOP nominee Mitt Romney that dogged him in the final weeks of the campaign.
Though Clintonâs comment was incendiary and she apologized Saturday for making generalizations about so many of Trumpâs supporters, it is different from Romneyâs so-called 47% remark for several notable reasons.
Romney was recorded on video saying at a fundraiser that 47% of Americans would automatically vote for President Obama because they were dependent upon government and paid no taxes, and that his job was not to worry about them. There was an immediate uproar that he was denigrating almost half the nation, including veterans and seniors.
Clinton, speaking at a fundraiser Friday night in New York City, said half of Trumpâs supporters are a âbasket of deplorables,â who are racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic or Islamaphobic.
Here are some differences to keep in mind.
--The 47% remark dovetailed neatly with a narrative the Obama campaign had built throughout the summer that Romney was a heartless corporate chieftain. Clintonâs remark is an extension of her recent message that Trump does not represent the GOP moderates she is hoping to court..
--The voters Romney denigrated were voters whose support he was trying to win â working-class, blue-collar families in places like eastern Ohio and western Pennsylvania who felt the economy had left them behind. Clinton is not seeking the support of the people she smeared, voters who believe in Trumpâs proposals such as banning Muslims from entering the nation or building an enormous border wall and making Mexico pay for it.
--Romneyâs remarks were surreptitiously recorded at a fundraiser that was closed to the press. Clinton made her remarks at a fundraiser in front of the press.
--Clinton has called a segment of Trumpâs supporters âdeplorablesâ before, most recently in an interview with an Israeli television station earlier this week. Saying this group comprises half of Trumpâs supporters â meaning millions of Americans â is new, which triggered her expression of regret.
All that said, few people believe that the 47% remark is the only reason Romney lost the 2012 election. Rather he failed â winning 47% of the vote, ironically â because of the Obama campaignâs success at defining him early, the Democratsâ vastly superior ground game and Romneyâs inability to connect with voters.
Hillary Clinton expresses âregretâ for calling half of Donald Trump supporters âdeplorablesâ
Hillary Clinton expressed âregretâ on Saturday for her remarks a day earlier in which she described half of Donald Trumpâs supporters as âa basket of deplorables.â
âLast night I was âgrossly generalistic,â â Clinton said in a statement, using some of the language she noted in her remarks at a gala in Manhattan on Friday. âAnd thatâs never a good idea. I regret saying âhalfâ â that was wrong.â
Still, Clinton went on to assail Trumpâs âdeplorableâ rhetoric, noting, among other things, his public criticism of a family whose son was killed in Iraq and the occasions the billionaire businessman has retweeted social media users with ties to white supremacist groups.
During her remarks on Friday, Clinton added, that the other half of Trump supporters just want better jobs and more economic stability.
âThose are people we have to understand and empathize with as well,â she said
Still, Republicans on Saturday piled on Clinton for her remarks.
Kellyanne Conway, Trumpâs campaign manager, called on Clinton to apologize for her remarks. Meanwhile, Trump, who is set to attend the funeral of conservative activist Phyllis Schlafly on Saturday, tweeted that he was insulted.
Indiana Gov. Mike Pence, speaking before attendees at the Value Voters Summit in Washington, said Trump supporters are not âa basket of anything,â adding, they are âmembers of every class of this country who know that we can make America great again.â
âThe men and women who support Donald Trumpâs campaign are hard-working Americans: farmers, coal miners, teachers, veterans, members of our law enforcement community,â he said.
Hillary Clinton on some Donald Trump supporters: âA basket of deplorablesâ
Even as sheâs hurled criticism after criticism at Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton has avoided slamming his fans.
But that changed Friday night.
During brief remarks at the LGBT for Hillary Gala in lower Manhattan, Clinton called âhalfâ of those supporting the Republican nominee a âbasket of deplorables.â
âRight?â she said to laughter from attendees, which included entertainer Barbra Streisand. âThe racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, Islamaphobic â you name it. And unfortunately there are people like that. And he has lifted them up.â
Clinton assailed Trump for emboldening such individuals through social media and his own rhetoric. In a deluge of television advertisements in battleground states, Clinton and her Democratic allies have cast Trump as divisive and lacking the even temperament required of a president.
Still, recent national polls show support for Trump, as Clinton outpaces him by about 3 percentage points, according to an average of polls compiled by Real Clear Politics. Moreover, in several swing states, such as Florida and Ohio, Trump has gained ground in recent weeks.
Trump tweeted Saturday that Clinton was âinsultingâ and his campaign manager called for her to apologize.
Clinton didnât slam all Trump supporters. While she called some âirredeemable,â she said that others are just seeking a better future for their families.
âThey donât buy everything he says, but he seems to hold out some hope that their lives will be different. They wonât wake up and see their jobs disappear, lose a kid to heroin, feel like theyâre in a dead-end,â she said at the gala. âThose are people we have to understand and empathize with as well.â
Barbra Streisand sings special song for Donald Trump
At a gala for Hillary Clinton in Manhattan on Friday night, entertainer Barbra Streisand sang a special song for Donald Trump.
Streisand, 74, performed a parody of the hit song âSend in the Clownsâ with special lyrics for the Republican nominee.
Below are a few excerpts:
VERSE 1
Is he that rich?
Maybe heâs poor?
âTil he reveals his returns who can be sure?
Who needs this clown?
VERSE 2
Somethingâs amiss
I donât approve
If he were running the free world, where would we move?|
Name me a town?
Just who is this clown?