Trump lashes out at ‘disloyal’ Republicans

Agence France-Presse

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Trump lashes out at ‘disloyal’ Republicans

AFP

(UPDATED) Declaring himself unchained from party strictures, the bombastic real estate mogul publicly berates party big-wig Paul Ryan as a 'weak and ineffective leader'

WASHINGTON DC, USA (UPDATED) – Embattled presidential hopeful Donald Trump lashed out against “disloyal” Republicans in a ranting tweetstorm Tuesday, October 11, deepening a split that threatens the future of the 162-year-old party. 

Declaring himself unchained from party strictures, the White House nominee berated Republican leaders for offering “zero support” and promised a bareknuckle 28-day campaign against Hillary Clinton.

Trump ridiculed the party’s 2008 White House nominee John McCain as “very foul mouthed.” He called Paul Ryan, the nation’s top elected Republican, a “weak and ineffective leader.”

“It is so nice that the shackles have been taken off me and I can now fight for America the way I want to,” Trump said in a 3-hour cyber outburst. “I will teach them!”

Relations between Trump and party leaders have always been strained – from the outset many considered the bombastic reality-TV-star-turned-politico unfit to take up the mantle of Abraham Lincoln and Ronald Reagan.

But the snapping point has been Trump’s precipitous fall in the polls after the emergence of a video in which he bragged about groping women.

US President Barack Obama addressed the scandal Tuesday, after White House spokesman Josh Earnest earlier in the day called the comments “repugnant” and said most people would consider the actions described as “sexual assault.”

“You don’t have to be a husband or a father to say that’s not right. You just have to be a decent human being,” Obama said while campaigning for Clinton in North Carolina.

Trump has apologized for the comments, saying they were just “locker-room” banter.

The latest Real Clear Politics polling average has Clinton ahead by 6 points across the country, and the latest polls show her ahead in a slew of must-win states for Trump.

With his campaign in a tailspin, Trump seemed determined to ram a wedge between party leaders and the radicalized grassroots that propelled his political career.

For much of Barack Obama’s 8 years in the White House, the Republican leadership has struggled to keep hardliners inside the tent. 

Now Trump is fueling an intra-party war, with streams of Republicans saying they will vote for Clinton and Trump fans vowing to bring down Congressional leaders like Ryan and McCain.

The gloves are off

Trump’s anger seems to have been prompted by Ryan suggesting in a conference call with Republican lawmakers on Monday, October 10, that they stop defending the party nominee and focus on limiting electoral losses in Congress.

But Trump’s belligerent reaction is an ominous sign for Republicans worried about losing control of the House of Representatives and the Senate.

“Disloyal R’s are far more difficult than Crooked Hillary. They come at you from all sides. They don’t know how to win – I will teach them!” Trump tweeted.

Trump’s campaign has long had a no holds barred quality but the break with Republicans signals the start of an even more vitriolic campaign.

Obama said it “does not make sense” that some Republicans express their disapproval of Trump’s lurid comments but continue to support him for the White House.

“You can’t repeatedly denounce what is said by someone and then say: I am still going to endorse him to be the most powerful president on the planet,” he said.

Trump has also alienated allies by bringing up unproven sexual abuse allegations against Clinton’s husband, former president Bill Clinton, in a debate Sunday watched by tens of millions of Americans.

The last few days have seen Hillary Clinton’s speeches interrupted by people shouting “Bill Clinton is a rapist!” 

A right-wing website has offered $5,000 to anyone who goes to a rally and does the same.

An unsparing Trump campaign ad released Monday showed Hillary Clinton when she had pneumonia last month, coughing at a dais and stumbling as she tried to get into her motorcade after a 9/11 anniversary ceremony.

“Hillary Clinton doesn’t have the fortitude, strength or stamina to lead in our world,” the narrator says.

‘Accountable’

Clinton’s campaign will be eager to tether the whole Republican Party to Trump’s harsh message – which is popular with the party base but appears to have little appeal with the wider public.

“Somewhat of a civil war is breaking out in the Republican Party,” said Clinton communications director Jen Palmieri. “But I think that Donald Trump didn’t become the nominee of his party on his own.”

“The voters I imagine will hold them accountable (in) House and Senate races,” she added.

Clinton revived the Clinton-Gore 1992 White House ticket on Tuesday, campaigning in Miami with her husband’s vice president Al Gore.

Gore has been largely absent from politics since he lost the 2000 race in Florida to George W. Bush by a handful of votes.

In Miami he focused on the high stakes of November’s election. “Your vote really, really, really counts. You can consider me as Exhibit A.” – Rappler.com

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