Clinton unloads on Trump: ‘Hateful’, ‘inflammatory’, ‘bigotry’
“Hillary said ‘I really deplore the tone and inflammatory rhetoric of his campaign.’ I deplore the death and destruction she caused-stupidity”, Trump wrote.
“I know where she went, it’s disgusting, I don’t want to talk about it”, Trump said during a campaign event Monday night in Grand Rapids, Michigan. “His bigotry, his bluster, his bullying has become his campaign”.
The question came after Trump said Clinton got “schlonged” when she lost to Barack Obama in her first bid for president.
In recent weeks, however, Clinton has spent far more time attacking Trump and her would-be Republican rivals than Sanders, demonstrating a growing confidence in her primary standing and increased focus on the general election. He later tweeted, “I have great respect for women” and again warned her to “BE CAREFUL!”
Donald Trump cited a National Public Radio (NPR) report in Y 2011 that used the term “Schlonged” to describe Walter Mondale’s defeat in the Y 1984 presidential campaign. She was going to beat – she was favored to win, and she got schlonged. “I don’t know who would be worse, I don’t know, how could it be worse?” If Sanders splits with Clinton, it will change the perception of the Democratic primary. As reported by Think Progress, the term “schlong” typically refers to the penis but Trump attempted to say he didn’t actually mean it in that fashion. Among those interviewed after the debate, Clinton’s lead grew to 60 percent vs. Sanders’ 27 percent.
While refusing to respond to Trump’s latest, Clinton did take the opportunity to make an overall point about Trump, condemning the furor that has characterized much of his campaign.
The billionaire businessman was previously accused of making a sexist remark about Fox News host Ms. Megyn Kelly, when he said she had blood coming out of her whatever after the first Republican debate. Lemon attempted to steer the discussion back to Trump by asking, “Have you ever heard a presidential candidate say things like this?”
Trump, leading the field to be the Republican nominee in the November 2016 presidential election, also made a reference to Clinton returning to the stage late after a bathroom break during a Democratic debate on Saturday night.
The gender gap that has persisted throughout the race for the Democratic nomination continues as the year comes to a close, with women favoring Clinton 56% to 23% and men about evenly divided, 46% Sanders to 44% Clinton.