Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump fields a question during
the first Republican presidential debate hosted by Fox News and Facebook
at the Quicken Loans Arena on August 6, 2015 in Cleveland, Ohio.
Organisers of a Republican event withdrew his invitation Saturday after
he suggested that a presidential debate moderator was tough on him
because she was menstruating. SCOTT OLSON | GETTY IMAGES | AFP
WASHINGTON
Organisers
of a Republican event withdrew frontrunner Donald Trump's invitation
Saturday after he suggested that a presidential debate moderator was
tough on him because she was menstruating.
The
off-handed comment unleashed a new storm of criticism against Trump as
he seeks the party's nomination for next year's election and leads in
the polls.
The bombastic billionaire came under fire
from his party after a particularly crude accusation that Fox News'
Megyn Kelly — one of the moderators at Thursday's Republican
presidential debate — singled him out with rough treatment.
Trump
had already called out the station's moderators for asking "unfair"
questions after Kelly brought up his use of derogatory language towards
women in Twitter posts.
Kelly asked him if this was befitting a man vying to be the US president.
But he turned up the tone Friday evening when he told CNN that Kelly "is just somebody I didn't have a lot of respect for."
"You can see there was blood coming out of her eyes, blood coming out of her wherever," he continued.
Those
remarks prompted a prominent grassroots Republican event in Atlanta —
RedState Gathering — to rescind a speaking invitation for Saturday.
"As
much as I do personally like Donald Trump, his comment about Megyn
Kelly on CNN is a bridge too far for me," said conservative pundit Erick
Erickson, who is hosting the RedState activist event.
Trump was to have spoken at it.
Meanwhile,
Trump's campaign told various US media on Saturday that he sacked top
political advisor Roger Stone, as the controversy churned on.
"Roger
wanted to use the campaign for his own personal publicity... and Mr
Trump wants to keep the focus of the campaign on how to Make America
Great Again," a campaign spokesperson told CNN.
DENIED BEING FIRED
Stone, however, took issue on Twitter with that version of events.
"Sorry
@realDonaldTrump didn't fire me — I fired Trump. Disagree (sic) with
diversion to food fight with @megynkelly away core issue messages," he
wrote.
"I have nothing but respect for (Trump)," Stone told CNN.
"He's leading 15, other experienced applications, why? Because he had a
core message of taking on the system, fixing our broke immigration
system.
“Taking on China and Mexico, redoing trade deals to bring jobs back to the country. He was a breath of fresh air.
“I resigned largely because I thought I was having no impact and the campaign has been diverted from those big picture issues."
The other presidential candidates, meanwhile, were only too happy to try to take political advantage of the controversy.
Carly Fiorina, the only female Republican presidential candidate, tweeted: "Mr. Trump: There. Is. No. Excuse."
She later added "I stand with @megynkelly."
Wisconsin
governor and Republican presidential candidate Scott Walker followed
suit, tweeting: "I agree with @CarlyFiorina, there's no excuse for
Trump's comments. Stand with @MegynKelly."
POLITICALLY CORRECT FOOLS
Trump
tried late Saturday to backtrack from the comment about Kelly, stating
that he was not referring to the body part most people had in mind from
his remark on blood.
"Re Megyn Kelly quote: “You could
see there was blood coming out of her eyes, blood coming out of her
wherever' (NOSE). Just got on w/thought," Trump tweeted.
"So
many 'politically correct' fools in our country. We have to all get
back to work and stop wasting time and energy on nonsense!" he also
tweeted.
A statement from the Trump campaign widely
cited by US media also insisted that Trump was referring to Kelly's
nose, and that "only a deviant would think anything else."
The statement also called Erickson "a total loser."
Apparently
as part of the spin effort, Trump is now scheduled to appear Sunday on
ABC television on one of the top US current events programs, 'This
Week.'
HIGH VIEWERSHIP
A staggering 24 million viewers tuned in to Fox News to watch the debate, and Trump was clearly a main factor.
In a brutal tweet Friday, he let the broadcaster know it.
"@FoxNews
you should be ashamed of yourself. I got you the highest debate ratings
in your history & you say nothing but bad," Trump tweeted to his
3.5 million followers.
The Republicans have said they
plan to host eight more debates as the party whittles down its broad
field and determines its flag bearer to go against likely Democratic
nominee Hillary Clinton.
In the meantime, Trump is
sitting out the RedState summit in Atlanta, which includes appearances
by Republican presidential hopefuls Fiorina, Huckabee, Walker, Chris
Christie, Rick Perry, Bobby Jindal, Marco Rubio, Ted Cruz and Jeb Bush.
"@redstate I miss you all, and thanks for all of your support. Political correctness is killing our country," Trump tweeted.
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