Close X
Monday, November 4, 2024
ADVT 
International

Trump Disparages Women's Looks And Says Of Clinton: 'I Wasn't Impressed'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Oct, 2016 12:57 PM
    WASHINGTON — Donald Trump suggested some of his female accusers were unattractive and said of his opponent, Hillary Clinton, ''when she walked in front of me I wasn't impressed.''
     
    It all occurred in a rambling address Friday where Trump expressed exasperation with the news media, his political opponents, and the growing list of women accusing him of unwanted sexual touching.
     
    A partisan crowd burst out laughing when he mentioned Clinton. Trump fumed that he'd been accused of invading her space at the last debate. He said he was simply standing at his podium — and she walked past.
     
    ''She walks in front of me,'' Trump told the North Carolina crowd.
     
    ''And, believe me, when she walked in front of me I wasn't impressed.''
     
    It was in keeping with the tone of Friday afternoon's rally. Trump fumed at the growing list of women accusing him of sexual misconduct — in fact, one former contestant on his television show, ''The Apprentice,'' was holding such a news conference at that same moment.
     
    Trump insulted his accusers for a second straight day. In reference to one, he said, ''When you looked at that horrible woman last night you said, 'I don't think so.'... Believe me, she would not be my first choice.'' He also questioned why a Canadian who formerly wrote for People magazine never included his supposed 2005 groping in a story until now.
     
    He added of her: ''(This) never would happen. I don't think it would happen with very many people — but they certainly wouldn't happen with me... Check out her Facebook page — you'll understand.''
     
     
    Trump acknowledged his campaign team wanted him to stop discussing this stuff, and start focusing on jobs. His horrible approval ratings among women are a big reason he's trailing in most surveys by about seven percentage points, prompting Democrats to start musing about the once-unthinkable possibility of regaining control of both chambers of Congress.
     
    But Trump said he couldn't let it go.
     
    He railed against the dishonest press. In passing, Trump noted that one of the newspapers writing about the sexual allegations, the New York Times, is part-owned by a Mexican, billionaire Carlos Slim.
     
    Trump fumed: Why don't they talk about my big crowds? Why won't they write about Democrats' emails published on Wikileaks?
     
    According to U.S. intelligence, the emails were stolen by Russian hackers in an effort to influence the American election. Some of the revelations being promoted as stories by the Republican party include:
     
    —Summaries of speeches where Clinton urged bankers to take public and private positions on controversial issues.
     
    —An email where top Democrat Donna Brazile, who does commentary on CNN, learned about questions to be asked at a town hall and tipped off the Clinton campaign.
     
     
    —A Clinton campaign aide joking with a friend about Fox News' owner sending his children to Catholic school. Someone working at a think-tank replied that perhaps Rupert Murdoch was attracted to systematic thought and backwards gender relations.
     
    Other emails are being misleadingly edited and distributed in social media. For instance, one email chain on right-wing blogs said Clinton hates ''everyday Americans.'' In fact, an email chain showed she dislikes the term, which her campaign briefly used last year in reference to working-class voters.
     
    This kind of crazy conspiracy-mongering is what gave the Republican party Donald Trump, President Barack Obama said Friday.
     
    Elsewhere on the campaign trail, the president said top Republicans had only themselves to blame. He said party leaders turned a blind eye for years to insane conspiracy theories being peddled by supporters.
     
    As one example, he cited the rumours about him being born in Africa — which Trump encouraged. Another example was a military training exercise last year — which some on the right feared was a plot to invade Texas. In an attempt to appease the rumour-mongers, the state's Republican governor asked the Texas National Guard to keep an eye on things.
     
    ''A lot of Republican elected officials have just stood by,'' Obama told an Ohio rally.
     
    ''Over time, because a lot of the hard-core Republican partisan voters were just hearing this stuff over and over again, they started to believe it. And that's what allowed Donald Trump suddenly to emerge. Donald Trump didn't build all this crazy conspiracy stuff. And some Republicans who knew better stood by silently, and even during the course of this campaign, didn't say anything.
     
     
    ''I know some of them now are walking away, but why did it take you this long? You said you're the party of family values. What, you weren't appalled earlier when he was saying degrading things about women, when he was judging them based on a score of, 'Are they a two or a 10? That wasn't enough for you?''

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Auto Sales On Pace For Record, Driven By Popularity Of Light Trucks

    Auto Sales On Pace For Record, Driven By Popularity Of Light Trucks
    At least once a week, 76-year-old Ken Dacko makes the 200-kilometre round trip from his home in Alma, Ont., to the factory in Brampton, Ont., where he works.

    Auto Sales On Pace For Record, Driven By Popularity Of Light Trucks

    Aqilah Sandhu, Muslim Woman Wins Right To Wear Headscarf At Work In Germany

    Aqilah Sandhu, Muslim Woman Wins Right To Wear Headscarf At Work In Germany
    Aqilah Sandhu, a star student at Augsburg University law faculty, began a traineeship with the Bavarian judicial system after completing her state law exams, but was told in a letter that she was not allowed to interrogate witnesses or appear in courtrooms while wearing her headscarf.

    Aqilah Sandhu, Muslim Woman Wins Right To Wear Headscarf At Work In Germany

    Lord Paul Family's Dynamism Has Changed Many Lives: UK's Ex-PM Gordon Brown

    Lord Paul Family's Dynamism Has Changed Many Lives: UK's Ex-PM Gordon Brown
    Lauding Lord Swraj Paul and his family, Britain's former Prime Minister Gordon Brown has said their "dynamism and contribution" to the community has changed the lives of many people across several countries.

    Lord Paul Family's Dynamism Has Changed Many Lives: UK's Ex-PM Gordon Brown

    Lenders Lower Kingfisher House Reserve Price To Rs 135 Crore

    Lenders Lower Kingfisher House Reserve Price To Rs 135 Crore
    Three months after they failed to sell the Kingfisher House, erstwhile headquarters of the defunct Kingfisher Airlines, lenders have once again put up the property for auction with a lower reserve price of Rs 135 crore so as to part-recover their loans.

    Lenders Lower Kingfisher House Reserve Price To Rs 135 Crore

    British Lawmakers Call For Legalising Prostitution

    A cross-party group of British lawmakers led by Indian-origin lawmaker Keith Vaz has called on the UK government to decriminalise sex work and prostitution, first time in decades that Parliament has considered the "polarising" subject.

    British Lawmakers Call For Legalising Prostitution

    US Family Begs For Mercy For Couple Held In Afghanistan

    US Family Begs For Mercy For Couple Held In Afghanistan
    Caitlan Coleman and Joshua Boyle lost touch with their families while travelling in a mountainous region near the Afghan capital, Kabul.

    US Family Begs For Mercy For Couple Held In Afghanistan