Trump invite cancelled after menstruation comment
The New York Times reported Saturday that many Republicans are anxious that between Trump’s bluntness and open hostility towards Kelly, Florida Senator Marco Rubio’s debate position on abortion access for rape and incest victims, and “multiple male candidates saying they would shut down the federal government over financing for Planned Parenthood”, women may be looking elsewhere when it comes time to vote in Election 2016.
Tana Goertz, Trump’s Iowa co-chair, said she did not interpret the comment in the same way critics have, and was not offended.
Donald Trump has been uninvited to a Republican party event over a suggestion that a debate moderator was tough on him because she was menstruating.
Mackowiak added it also represents a missed opportunity for Trump to speak to conservative activists and reporters who had gathered for the event. “We don’t do anything right”, in his closing statement.
He was back on TV Friday morning, telling the morning talk shows he couldn’t recall insulting women in the past – rejecting the premise of a debate question posed by Fox News’ Megyn Kelly.
“Mr Trump said “blood was coming out of her eyes and whatever” meaning nose …”
Real-estate mogul Donald Trump, unsurprisingly, isn’t backing down after igniting yet another controversy in the presidential race. “We have a tremendously successful campaign and Roger wanted to use the campaign for his own personal publicity”.
Trump’s absence from Saturday’s program threatened to overshadow appearances by a number of his rivals, including Huckabee, Walker, Sen.
He might not have helped his cause on Friday after he retweeted a tweet that called Kelly a “bimbo”.
“So many ‘politically correct” fools in our country. It was also quite astounding in that only hours after the debate the video was up and running on YouTube.
“If they are fighting themselves like that, I think the Democrats are going to take over, again”. Scott Walker said “there’s no excuse for Trump’s comments”. “Does that sound to you like the temperament of a man we should elect as president, and how will you answer the charge from Hillary Clinton, who was likely to be the Democratic nominee, that you are part of the war on women?”
Erickson called the comment inappropriate – and one that crossed the line of decency.
A later statement from his campaign said “only a deviant” would think Mr Trump meant anything else.