Trump says not ‘morally obligated’ to defend Obama
BY Agencies21 Sep 2015 11:16 PM GMT
Agencies21 Sep 2015 11:16 PM GMT
R<g data-gr-id="34">epublican presi</g>dential frontrunner Donald Trump has said he was not morally obligated to defend Barack Obama after he let pass unchallenged a questioner’s assertion that the US leader is a Muslim.
In a rapid-fire series of tweets, the billionaire real estate mogul on Saturday responded to a barrage of criticism of his handling of the Thursday incident, which came from Democrats and one fellow Republican candidate, New Jersey Governor Chris Christie.
“Am I morally obligated to defend the president every time somebody says something bad or controversial about him? I don’t think so!” Trump wrote, ending an unusually long period of silence
after he was largely quiet on Friday.
But later in the day, the bombastic businessman struck a different tone, acknowledging when asked that he would have “no problem” with appointing a <g data-gr-id="24">Muslim American</g> to his cabinet if he were elected.
Trump, who helped fuel a “birther” movement in 2011 by repeatedly demanding Obama prove he wasn’t born in Kenya, appeared to encourage a man at a campaign stop in New Hampshire Thursday after he made the incorrect assertion about Obama’s faith.
“We have a problem in this country, it’s called Muslims.
We know our current president is one, you know he’s not even an American,” the unidentified questioner said.
Trump chuckled and interrupted him to say, “We need this question. This is the first question.”
Putting himself in Trump’s shoes, Christie said he would have corrected the questioner and said: “No, the president’s a Christian and he was born in this country.”
Hillary Clinton, the leading Democratic candidate, called Trump’s handling of the incident “disturbing and just plain wrong,” while White House spokesman Josh Earnest said it was no surprise because “the people who hold these views are pa<g data-gr-id="109">rt</g> of Mr. Trump’s base.”
Trump slips in post-debate poll, Fiorina climbs
Frontrunner Donald Trump slipped in the polls after this week’s Republican debate while former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina shot to second place, a new poll released on Sunday found.
The CNN/ORC poll had <g data-gr-id="122">Trump</g> still leading the field, with 24 <g data-gr-id="121">per cent</g> of Republican voters supporting him, but that total was down eight percentage points from earlier this month. “The only poll that matters is the big one. You know that one. It’s going to be the election,” Trump said.
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