Trump Disinvited From Conservative Forum Over Megyn Kelly Comments

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ATLANTA (AP) — Republican presidential candidates are getting a second chance to make a good first impression with conservative activists after their inaugural televised debates had unheard of millions tuning in to see how they would play off each other.

Unlike the Fox News debates that divided the 17-candidate field into two groups on crowded stages, the RedState Gathering in Atlanta offered several of those seeking the Republican nomination a half-hour all to themselves. On Saturday, the lineup includes former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker.

Businessman Donald Trump had been on the program, but late Friday RedState's Erick Erickson said he was withdrawing his invitation because of a comment Trump made earlier that evening about Fox News debate moderator Megyn Kelly.

Referring to Kelly's questions during the debate, Trump told CNN, "There was blood coming out of her eyes, blood coming out of her wherever." In a statement on his RedState website, Erickson said: "I just don't want someone on stage who gets a hostile question from a lady and his first inclination is to imply it was hormonal."

Trump's campaign responded: "This is just another example of weakness through being politically correct. For all of the people who were looking forward to Mr. Trump coming, we will miss you. Blame Erick Erickson, your weak and pathetic leader."

Trump was leading in the polls going into the prime-time debate Thursday night and drew most of the attention before, during and after a program that drew a record 24 million viewers. Carly Fiorina, the former tech industry executive, came out of the late afternoon debate, watched by 6 million, with renewed interest in her campaign.

"Well, I don't know. I think we kind of rumbled last night. What do you think?" Fiorina said Friday to cheers from more than 1,000 people at the RedState Gathering. "I had a lot of fun last night."

Her rivals are hoping that the first debates mean a fresh look for them, too.

"Party donors, party leaders need to take a deep breath, put down the sharp objects, step away from the window," Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal said at RedState. "The voters will decide who our nominee is. They'll decide who the president is."

Former Texas Gov. Rick Perry noted that he'd been relegated to the pre-debate debate for the seven candidates who failed to qualify for the main event. "I was up late last night," Perry said. "Not as late as I wanted to be."

But Perry campaigned as if he was one of the party's top-tier candidates, declaring that his 14 years as governor in Texas prove he's worthy of a promotion.

"It's important for our country to have this discussion about executive experience," Perry said, knocking President Barack Obama as "an inexperienced senator" who has "driven this country into a ditch."

Florida Sen. Marco Rubio and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie also spoke Friday at RedState. Rubio was at ease with the crowd and recalled his first visit with the conservative activists in 2010, when he was a longshot Senate candidate in Florida.

"I was an underdog against (former Florida Gov.) Charlie Crist and I was trailing by 40 points in the polls," he said. "Now I'm here running for president."

Christie told the crowd that his leadership of a Democratic-leaning state makes him "battle tested for Washington." He fielded questions about how Southern conservatives can connect with his boisterous Jersey personality and said that Americans from all regions care about a sound economy, national security and individual liberty.

"Think about listening to this accent for eight years," he joked. "You'll just have to deal with the New Jersey thing. It will be fine. Don't worry about it."

:laff:

This is Stone Cold vs The Corporation all over again. Republicans will rue the day they made Trump a kingmaker of sorts.
 

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Trump escalates his sexist attacks on Megyn Kelly
What it was like to watch the GOP debate at NYC's Trump Bar

Trump largely dismissed Kelly's question at the debate, but later he went directly after her.

Before dawn, he had retweeted a post calling Kelly a "bimbo." The post was later deleted, but on Friday evening Trump called Kelly a "lightweight."

"She's not very tough and not very sharp," Trump said during a phone interview on CNN. "I don't respect her as a journalist."

Trumps attacks on Kelly also prompted a response from Rupert Murdoch, CEO of Fox News's parent company.

As the furor rose, Trump tried to control the damage, suggesting in a tweet that he was talking about Kelly's nose, as opposed to menstruation.

Despite the risks in attacking a high-profile woman like Kelly, Trump's campaign team defended his strategy. Trump’s campaign manager Corey Lewandowski said in a report in Politico that his willingness to take on Kelly makes him the kind of fight the GOP needs.

“If the Democratic nominee is going to be Hillary Clinton then you would want a strong person to stand up to make America great again.”

But there's no question that some Republicans feel Trump is going too far. After his "blood" comments, conservative commentator Erick Erickson said he was withdrawing his invitation for Trump to appear at his RedState Gathering in Atlanta on Saturday. "I just don't want someone on stage who gets a hostile question from a lady and his first inclination is to imply it was hormonal," Erickson wrote on the RedState website Friday night. "It just was wrong."

Trump's campaign responded: "This is just another example of weakness through being politically correct. For all of the people who were looking forward to Mr. Trump coming, we will miss you. Blame Erick Erickson, your weak and pathetic leader."

Other candidates appeared to be using the events as an opportunity to attack Trump from relatively safe ground.

In a series of interviews earlier Friday on network television, the billionaire businessman questioned whether he had actually used the words as Kelly had alleged during the debate.


MegynKelly-640x360.jpg



Fox News moderators from left, Chris Wallace, Megyn Kelly and Bret Baier during Thursday's presidential debate.

IMAGE: ANDREW HARNIK/ASSOCIATED PRESS

"You know, some of the statements she made about the women, I don't recognize those words whatsoever," Trump said on ABC's "Good Morning America." ''We're going to take a very serious look at it."

Trump has a long history of lobbing insults at those he feels have treated him unfairly, and advises those who buy his books to do the same.

"For many years I've said that if someone screws you, screw them back," he wrote in "Trump: How to Get Rich." ''When somebody hurts you, just go after them as viciously and as violently as you can."

When doing so, he has repeatedly targeted women and their physical appearance.

"Rosie O'Donnell's disgusting, I mean both inside and out. You take a look at her, she's a slob. She talks like a truck driver," he said in 2006 during an interview with "Entertainment Tonight." ''I'd look her right in that fat, ugly face of hers, I'd say, 'Rosie, you're fired'" from her television show, "The View."

During the debate, Trump acknowledged making such comments — but only about O'Donnell. When Kelly said Trump's comments had gone beyond O'Donnell and asked about his use of such insults on Twitter, Trump replied that he didn't "have time for total political correctness."

A review of Trump's writings, televised interviews and Twitter feed show he's long used harsh language to describe women — and occasionally men.

In tweets sent last year, Trump called Huffington Post editor Arianna Huffington "a dog who wrongfully comments on me" and said she is "ugly both inside and out!"

In 2012, Trump wrote on Twitter of singer Bette Midler: "But whenever she sees me, she kisses my ass. She's disgusting."

Trump has also said the same of men. "Little @MacMiller, I'm now going to teach you a big boy lesson about lawsuits and finance. You ungrateful dog!" he tweeted in 2013 at a rapper who wrote a song titled "Donald Trump."

And to former U.S. Rep. Barney Frank in 2011: "Barney Frank looked disgusting — nipples protruding — in his blue shirt before Congress. Very very disrespectful."

During the debate, Kelly also referenced a boardroom scene from Trump's NBC's realty show, "Celebrity Apprentice," in which Trump was told by one contestant that a female teammate had gotten down on her knees to beg.

"That must be a pretty picture, you dropping to your knees," Trump said in response.

In the book, Trump declared that, "All the women on 'The Apprentice' flirted with me — consciously or unconsciously. That's to be expected."

And he had this to say about women's victories on the show: "It's certainly not groundbreaking news that the early victories by the women on 'The Apprentice' were, to a very large extent, dependent on their sex appeal."

On some occasions Trump appears to have recognized he's gone too far. In April, he retweeted, then deleted, a tweet that read, "If Hillary Clinton can't satisfy her husband what makes her think she can satisfy America?"
Trump escalates his sexist attacks on Megyn Kelly

:mjlol:
 

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Trump hurls more insults after invitation to conservative event is pulled

BY JUANA SUMMERS1 HOUR AGO

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Donald Trump fired back Saturday after his invitation to an annual gathering of influential conservatives in Atlanta was rescinded, saying that the group's founder was a "total loser" and chiding his critics for their political correctness.

Trump's comments Saturday targeted the well-known conservative blogger Erick Erickson, the organizer of the yearly Red State Gathering.

Trump said it was an "honor" to be disinvited from the conservative gathering in Atlanta and that Erickson "has a history of supporting establishment losers in failed campaigns." He also rounded up a list of past indelicate statements by Erickson, including calling First Lady Michelle Obama a "Marxist Harpy."

Erickson rebutted Trump on Twitter Saturday:

Trump's pulled invite from RedState Gathering is the latest twist in a bizarre 48 hours in which the presidential campaign cycle has been dominated by Trump's attacks on Fox News anchor Megyn Kelly, one of three moderators of the first GOP primary debate.

Most recently, Trump slammed Kelly in a interview with CNN with what many construed as a thinly veiled reference to menstruation: “You could see there was blood coming out of her eyes. Blood coming out of her…wherever," Trump said.

That was apparently the last straw for RedState's Erickson.

"As much as I do personally like Donald Trump, his comment about Megyn Kelly on CNN is a bridge too far for me,” Erickson wrote on Red State late Friday night.

Trump's Saturday statement made little attempt to clarify what exactly he was getting at. Trump, the statement said, meant Kelly's nose and "only a deviant would think anything else."

Trump escalates his sexist attacks on Megyn Kelly



idk how to embed the tweets

:dead:
 
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