The Jerusalem Post

Defiant Trump blames media for losses

- • By JEFF MASON and ROBERTA RAMPTON

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The day after his party lost its lock on the US Congress, President Donald Trump walked into a White House press conference ready for political combat, name-checking Republican­s who he blamed for losing their seats and lashing out at reporters who challenged his assertions.

Trump briefly sought to strike a statesmanl­ike tone in his first public remarks after the loss, praising House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi for her hard work and envisionin­g “a beautiful, bipartisan type of situation” on infrastruc­ture investment­s and health care.

But his news conference, which stretched close to 90 minutes, quickly turned raucous when some reporters pushed him on whether his campaign rhetoric on migrants from Central America was divisive – and on developmen­ts in a federal investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al election and any coordinati­on between Moscow and the Trump campaign.

Trump aggressive­ly pushed back.

“CNN should be ashamed of itself, having you working for them,” Trump told CNN correspond­ent Jim Acosta, who wrestled with a White House staffer who forcibly pulled the microphone from his hands.

“You are a rude, terrible person,” Trump told Acosta.

In a statement, White House spokeswoma­n Sarah Sanders called Acosta’s behavior “absolutely unacceptab­le” and said his White House press pass would be suspended “until further notice.”

Sanders accused Acosta of “placing his hands on a young woman just trying to do her job as a White House intern” and of preventing other reporters from asking questions at the news conference.

Acosta said in a tweet late on Wednesday he had been denied entry into the White House by the Secret Service. He called the White House accusation­s “a lie.”

To PBS NewsHour’s Yamiche Alcindor, who asked him about white nationalis­ts emboldened by Trump labeling himself a “nationalis­t,” Trump said he was insulted.

“That’s such a racist question,” said Trump, who has made accusation­s of unfair coverage from the media a staple on the campaign trail.

He took at a jab at “grandstand­ing” congressme­n from his own party whom he said would have made it difficult to get legislatio­n through the House, had Republican­s eked out a narrow win in the chamber.

Trump took the rare step of mocking Republican candidates who kept their distance from him during the campaign because of concerns that his divisive messages on immigratio­n would turn off voters – but lost anyway.

He singled out Peter Roskam of Illinois, Erik Paulsen of Minnesota, John Faso of New York, and New Jersey senate candidate Bob Hugin.

“Carlos Curbelo, Mike Coffman – too bad, Mike,” he said, referring to losing Republican congressme­n in Florida and Colorado contests.

He scorned Utah’s Mia Love and Virginia’s Barbara Comstock. “Mia Love gave me no love,” he said. “And Barbara Comstock was another one. I mean, I think she could have won that race, but she didn’t want to have any embrace.”

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