The Daily Courier

Trump takes another shot at Clinton

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WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump took another swing at Hillary Clinton in the latest sign that his campaign fury hasn’t faded, retweeting a mock video that shows him smacking a golf ball that — in the next frame — seemingly strikes her in the back before she stumbles and falls down while boarding a plane.

Trump retweeted the brief video on his official Twitter account early Sunday, which appears to be a doctored version of news footage from 2011 that shows the then-secretary of state falling after climbing the airplane stairs.

The re-edited video appears to have superimpos­ed images of a golf ball that is shown hitting Clinton.

The tweet says: “Donald Trump’s amazing golf swing #CrookedHil­lary.”

A Clinton spokesman declined comment. The White House issued no immediate comment, and Trump aides have said in the past that his tweets “speak for themselves.” The assessment from Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif.: “juvenile.”

Back in July, Trump vented his rage against the media by posting someone else’s doctored anti-CNN video that showed Trump pummeling a man in a business suit — the man’s face obscured by the CNN logo — outside a wrestling ring.

Trump has stepped up his criticism of Clinton since the Democratic presidenti­al nominee reemerged in the spotlight to promote her new book about the 2016 campaign.

She is unsparing in her assessment of Trump, calling him “a clear and present danger to the country and the world.”

Trump often cites his electoral vote victory as evidence of campaign prowess and popularity with Americans. He is quick to challenge or criticize anyone or anything that might undercut that premise. Trump has establishe­d a commission to investigat­e his unsubstant­iated claims that millions of people voted illegally in 2016, when Clinton won the popular vote by nearly 2.9 million votes.

“It is distressin­g though to have a president that, frankly, will tweet and retweet things as juvenile as that,” Schiff said on ABC’s This Week Sunday. “It doesn’t help, I think, in terms of his stature. It doesn’t help in terms of the stature of our whole country.”

Clinton’s book assigns blame for her presidenti­al loss on several factors, including interferen­ce from Russian hackers, accusation­s levelled at her by former FBI Director James Comey and even her gender.

The White House has criticized the book, with spokeswoma­n Sarah Huckabee Sanders calling it “sad” that the last chapter of Clinton’s public life will be defined by selling books with “false and reckless attacks.”

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