War of words escalates as Clinton knocks Trump

epa05344671 US Democratic Presidential candidate Hillary Clinton (2R) joins actresses Sally Fields (L),  Elizabeth Banks (2L) and  Jaime King (R) on stage prior to an address to supporters at the 'Women for Hillary' campaign event at West Los Angeles College in Culver City,  California, USA, 03 June 2016. Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and US Senator Bernie Sanders are locked in a tight race in the California primary which will  be held on 07 June 2016.  EPA/MIKE NELSON

 

San Bernardino / AFP

Hillary Clinton launched stinging criticism of Donald Trump, even suggesting her likely Republican presidential opponent wants to be America’s “dictator,” as she proclaimed she will be the Democratic flag bearer once California votes next week.
President Barack Obama lent his voice to the denunciation, saying Trump’s aggressive posture towards immigrants, Muslims and women is “feeding resentments” among Americans and urging them to seek out scapegoats for their frustrations and problems. Amid increasingly brazen attacks on both sides, Clinton and Trump are emerging as the two rivals who will do battle in the general election.
Trump is already the presumptive Republican nominee, while Clinton has begun talking as if she is the Democratic flag bearer.
“We need everybody to show up on June 7,” she told a few hundred supporters at a college in Culver City, California. “If all goes well, I will have the great honor as of Tuesday to be the Democratic nominee for president,” she said to loud cheers.
Democrats in six states vote Tuesday, including California and New Jersey. Clinton is already on the cusp of securing enough delegates to defeat Senator Bernie Sanders for the nomination and she is certain to surpass the threshold on June 7.
Sanders has been barnstorming California, hoping for a miracle in which he wins the remaining contests and many so-called super-delegates, senior party figures who can vote at the party convention for whomever they choose, switch alliances and support him.
But Clinton barely mentioned Sanders’s name, opting instead for a full-on assault on Trump during her four stops Friday, in Culver City, Westminster, Santa Ana and San Bernardino.
“Donald Trump is not qualified to be president and commander in chief,” she said. Clinton added that she was appalled at the tenor of the political discourse, suggesting Trump was straying from democratic principles. “We are trying to elect a president, not a dictator,” she said in San Bernardino.

‘Ready to lead’
She battered Trump over his character and his lack of coherent foreign policies, branding him “temperamentally unfit” and otherwise unprepared to lead the United States.
“He just engages in rants and personal feuds and outright lies, something our nation cannot afford in our commander in chief,” the former secretary of state said.
More than a dozen women—Hollywood actresses, members of Congress, and civil servants—joined her on stage in Culver City to offer their support. “She is bad-ass, and she is ready to lead,” US House Democrat Linda Sanchez boomed.
While Clinton has upped her attacks on Trump as a fraud, Trump has drilled into Clinton as dishonest and “crooked.”
But Trump, who has faced repeated accusations of racism and xenophobia, waded deeper into controversy on Friday after praising a black supporter as “my African American” at a rally in Redding, California. “Oh, look at my African American over here. Look at him,” Trump said. “Are you the greatest?”
Campaign spokeswoman Hope Hicks said there was “no ill will intended, obviously.”
Trump also hit out at the protesters—he labeled them “thugs”—who clashed with his supporters in California the previous evening, the latest in a string of his rallies to be marred by violence.

Trump hits out at ‘hater’ judge

Washington / AFP

Donald Trump again lambasted the judge handling a pair of lawsuits over his defunct online university, insisting that the jurist’s Mexican heritage makes him
biased.
The Republican presidential frontrunner slammed Judge Gonzalo Curiel in a speech last week as a “hater” and a “total disgrace” whose Mexican parentage poses an “absolute conflict” in the cases. He doubled down on those comments in an interview published in The Wall Street Journal, saying Curiel—a US-born native of Indiana—might be “biased” by Trump’s controversial campaign vow to build an anti-immigrant wall on America’s southern border with Mexico.
“I’m building a wall. It’s an inherent conflict of interest,” Trump told the daily, noting that Curiel also had belonged to an organization of Hispanic judges—another disqualifier in his eyes.
Reminded on CNN that Curiel is American, Trump doubled down: “he’s of Mexican heritage, and he’s very proud of it.”
The developer and reality television host has enthused supporters and enraged many others with his calls for building a wall on the US-Mexican border and alleging that Mexico sends its criminals to the United States.

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