The Free Press Journal

Trump, Hillary exchange acid jokes at New York dinner

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Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump exchanged jokes sprinkled with acid remarks at a New York charity dinner held one day after the last presidenti­al debate before the US elections on November 8.

The two candidates managed to sit two seats from each from each other and remain - mostly - civil on Thursday night at the whitetie Al Smith Dinner, the traditiona­l break from attacks during every US presidenti­al campaign cycle, NBC News reported, according to IANS. Trump and Clinton did not appear to acknowledg­e each other as they arrived to take their seats flanking Cardinal Timothy Dolan, the archbishop of New York, at the upscale Waldorf-Astoria hotel. But the two nominees both smiled broadly and laughed at each other's needles, and they did shake hands after the event.

The Manhattan billionair­e started by noting that he knew he was supposed to begin with a "self-deprecatin­g joke". "Some people think that might be tough for me," he said to laughter. "The truth is I'm actually a modest person. In fact, people tell me modesty might be my best quality - even better than my temperamen­t."

Trump then riffed on themes he brings up often on the campaign trail, such as mocking the size of Clinton's rallies and media bias, NBC News noted. Eventually, boos began emerging as Trump dropped the jokes almost entirely. "Here she is in public, pretending not to hate Catholics," Trump said, referencin­g an apparent email exposed by Wiki Leaks in which a Clinton spokeswoma­n seemed to joke about Catholics and evangelica­ls. Trump also brought up a moment from Wednesday night's debate. "Last night, I called Hillary a 'nasty woman'. This stuff is all relative. After listening to Hillary rattle on and on, I don't think so badly of Rosie O'Donnell (TV personalit­y) anymore. In fact, I'm actually starting like Rosie a lot," Trump said.

Clinton stuck to the traditiona­l script as she took the dais second. "I took a break from my rigorous nap schedule to be here," she told the audience. "Usually, I charge a lot for speeches like this." Turning to Trump, Hillary said, "Donald, if at any time you don't like what I say, feel free to stand up and shout 'Wrong!' after I say it." The Alfred E. Smith Memorial Foundation Dinner -- held on the third Thursday of every October -- is a tradition in American presidenti­al politics and marks the last time the two nominees share a stage, CNN reported.

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