by Suzanne Gould and Biodun Iginla, BBC News, New York
- 17 minutes ago
- From the section US & Canada
Donald
Trump has been criticised for failing to correct a supporter who said
US President Barack Obama was a Muslim and "not even an American".
The
Republican sought to laugh off the comment, which was preceded by the
supporter saying: "We have a problem in this country - it's called
Muslims". The comments were made at a campaign rally for Mr Trump in New Hampshire.
Democratic frontrunner Hillary Clinton said his failure to denounce "hateful rhetoric" was "disturbing and wrong".
Pointing to his first questioner at the campaign event in Rochester, the billionaire businessman said: "I like this guy."
"We have a problem in this country called Muslims," the man said. "We know our current president is one. You know he's not even an American."
"We need this question?" Mr Trump said, laughing.
"But anyway," the man continued, "we have training camps growing where they want to kill us. That's my question: When can we get rid of them?"
Mr Trump failed to clarify that Mr Obama is a Christian American, instead replying that "bad things are happening" and saying he would look into them.
Mrs Clinton joined criticism of Mr Trump on social media, tweeting: "Donald Trump not denouncing false statements about POTUS & hateful rhetoric about Muslims is disturbing & just plain wrong. Cut it out."
"This is certainly horrendous but unfortunately unsurprising given what we have seen already. The vile rhetoric coming from the GOP candidates is appalling," she added, calling on his rivals to denounce him.
Mr Trump's campaign manager Corey Lewandowski sought to play down the incident, telling US media that "all he heard was a question about training camps".
"The media wants to make this issue about Obama. The bigger issue is that Obama is waging a war against Christians in this country," Mr Lewandowski told the Washington Post.
The incident evoked a moment during the 2008 campaign when Republican nominee John McCain took the microphone away from a woman who said she did not trust Mr Obama because he was "an Arab".
But Mr Trump has been one of the leading sceptics, challenging Mr Obama in 2011 to produce his birth certificate to disprove rumours that he was born in Kenya, which the president did.
With more than a year until polling day, the businessman is ahead of his Republican rivals in the polls despite having no political experience.
2016 hopefuls
The early Republican frontrunner is Donald Trump
- Hillary Clinton will have learnt much from her failed campaign of 2008
- Florida senator Marco Rubio lost some right-wing fans by backing a bipartisan immigration reform package
- Wisconsin governor Scott Walker appeals to both the Republican establishment and the Tea Party
- Libertarian Rand Paul has his supporters - and enemies - among Republicans
- Veteran congressman Bernie Sanders is drawing huge crowds at his rallies
-
Republican debate's winners and losers
-
Has Fiorina found Trump's kryptonite?
-
Braggadocious: the GOP Twitter debate
-
Jeb Bush wants Thatcher on $10 note
-
The brain surgeon with presidential ambitions
-
Meet the 2016 hopefuls
-
Sanders steps out of his comfort zone
-
Video Can Trump 'trump' his US rivals?
-
Video The curse of the election frontrunners
-
Who will be the next candidate to drop?
-
Hillary's hard and painful road to 'sorry'
-
Trump bandwagon still speeding down tracks
-
Does Sanders surge threaten Hillary?
-
The huge Republican headache - and it's not Trump
-
Trump and Cruz forge unlikely 'bromance'
-
Five reasons Trump still tops polls
-
Trump’s billionaire bravado in Iowa
-
It's one-way fight between Clinton and Bush - for now
-
Will a Texan be back in the White House?
-
Can the Republicans win black votes?
-
Republican debate's winners and losers
-
Is it time for Hillary to panic?
-
Video Selina Scott: My feud with Trump
-
Foreign policy crash course for 2016 hopefuls
-
Three Republican 'colonels' plot their coup
No comments:
Post a Comment