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Donald Trump: ‘Schlonged’ was not a vulgar insult
Though she didn’t mention Trump by name, the remarks came in the wake of controversial comments made by the real estate mogul in which he called a bathroom break that she took during the most recent Democratic debate “disgusting” and said that she “got [expletive]” during the 2008 election. He repeatedly asked the crowd where Clinton had gone, before grimacing and saying he knew where she went and that it was disgusting. “We want to be very very straight up okay”, Trump said of Clinton’s late return from a bathroom break.
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“I know where she went, it’s disgusting, I don’t want to talk about it”, Mr Trump said. “I thought she quit, I thought she gave up”, Trump joked.
The Clinton campaign refused to issue an official statement regarding the remarks, insisting the “degrading” comments were not worthy of a formal response.
“She’s a liar!” he repeated at the rally, labeling Clinton “not a president”.
“It is not the kind of language someone running for president of the United States should be using”, Clinton said to applause.
Trump has since taken to Twitter, blaming the mainstream media for their reporting of his comments.
Clinton responded during a Tuesday appearance in Iowa.
Several news outlets have blasted Trump’s anti-Muslim immigration plan as bigoted, but the Philadelphia Daily News went as far as to compare him to Hitler on the front page.
Democratic leaders believe that reminding their voters of whom they may be up against in November helps motivate their party in a primary that hasn’t generated the excitement of the Republican field.
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“He’s the leading Republican candidate but he’s not really all that different from the other Republican candidates”, said Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta. One notable instance came in her first debate as a candidate for elective office when her Republican opponent for the U.S. Senate, Rick Lazio, infamously walked across a debate stage, wagged his finger and demanded she sign a campaign finance pledge. “It is playing into the hands of the violent jihadists”. “Because that is not who we are as Americans”. “We are totally focused on this primary right now”, said campaign manager Robby Mook. “It’s not a sign of strength to insult people with profanity”, Bush told reporters after speaking to voters at a community college in New Hampshire’s north country. “If you do things a little differently, if you say outrageous things and fight back, they love you”.