Clinton Camp Refuses to Respond to Trump’s ‘Degrading Language’
Clinton appeared Tuesday in Keota, Iowa, a small rural town where three high school students launched an energetic campaign to get Clinton to visit their school.
“She was going to beat Obama”, Trump said to the crowd. Sanders read out Trump’s remark that Clinton’s bathroom break was disgusting and quipped: “He must have a very unusual relationship with women”.
Trump had used the word at a rally on Monday in Grand Rapids, Michigan, describing Hillary Clinton’s defeat by then-Senator Barack Obama in the 2008 primaries.
“It is not the first time Mr Trump has referred to women in a controversial way”. Her campaign will also unveil what Clinton has called her “not-so-secret weapon” – her husband, former President Bill Clinton.
In a tweet Tuesday night, Trump called the media “dishonest” for its characterization of his remarks and said that the term he used was “not vulgar”.
“I really deplore the tone of his campaign, the inflammatory rhetoric that he is using to divide people, and his going after groups of people with hateful, incendiary rhetoric”, the Democratic front-runner for president told Register in a story published Wednesday (Dec. 23). She further added that Trump’s biased views, bullying slangs, and bluster have become a part of his campaign strategy, and he keeps on finding ways to humiliate her.
Though Clinton leads Sanders in national polls by more than 20 points, the numbers are much tighter in Iowa and New Hampshire, where Sanders has an edge.
If Mrs Clinton were elected, 33 per cent would be proud and 35 per cent would be embarrassed, according to the poll. “I’m off to powder my nose”, say the Donald Wives, knowing their future financial wealth may be on the line.
They also came as Clinton stood by her claim that ISIS operatives are using Trump in recruitment videos. “Don’t say it, it’s disgusting, let’s not talk, we want to be very, very straight up”.
A new national survey of voters conducted by Connecticut’s Quinnipiac University shows Donald Trump is still ahead of other GOP candidates, with 28 per-cent of the vote. “He heats things up more and that’s not only outrageous but it’s risky”.
As the early primaries and caucuses draw closer, Trump continues to generate headlines and fire up his base, even while looking past his Republican rivals, focusing on the other party’s frontrunner, and presenting himself as the GOP candidate who’s taking on the likely Democratic nominee.