The Post

Clinton slams Trump campaign built on ‘prejudice and paranoia’

- UNITED STATES

Democratic presidenti­al nominee Hillary Clinton accused Donald Trump yesterday of fuelling America’s ‘‘radical fringe’’ with racist rhetoric, even as her Republican rival sought to soften his image with an appeal to minorities.

Clinton needs to retain support from black and Latino voters to win the November 8 election, the same coalition that helped propel Democrat Barack Obama to the White House in 2008. Trump, whose support comes mainly from whites, is unlikely to be victorious unless he can cut into that support.

‘‘Donald Trump has built his campaign on prejudice and paranoia,’’ Clinton said in a scathing speech in Nevada. ‘‘He’s taking hate groups mainstream and helping a radical fringe take over one of America’s two major political parties.’’

‘‘This is a moment of reckoning for every Republican dismayed that the Party of Lincoln has become the Party of Trump,’’ Clinton said, referring to Abraham Lincoln, the first Republican president, who issued the Emancipati­on Proclamati­on and championed the 13th Amendment to the US Constituti­on during the Civil War that led to the abolition of slavery in 1865.

Trump, who trails Clinton in national opinion polls, has polled poorly with minorities and has been criticised for his proposals on immigratio­n, which include deporting millions of undocument­ed foreigners, building a wall along the Mexican border, and suspending Muslim immigratio­n to shore up national security. He described some Mexican immigrants as ‘‘criminals and rapists’’ in a 2015 speech launching his candidacy and more recently questioned the impartiali­ty of an American-born judge of Mexican heritage.

Yesterday, the New York real estate mogul-turned-politician criticised Clinton before her speech, saying she and her party had let black Americans down with failed economic policies and were falsely labelling Republican­s as bigoted. ‘‘When Democratic policies fail, they are left with only this one tired argument: You’re racist, you’re racist, you’re racist,’’ Trump told a crowd in Manchester, New Hampshire. ‘‘It’s a tired, disgusted argument and is so totally predictabl­e.’’

At a Mississipp­i rally on Thursday, Trump called Clinton a ‘‘bigot who sees people of colour only as votes, not as human beings.’’ He argued yesterday that Clinton’s opposition to charter schools and vouchers locked minority students in failing jobs, that her tax policies would hurt blackowned businesses and that she would allow immigrants to take jobs from minorities.

Trump said the Clinton attacks were not only an assault on him, but on all his supporters — people, he said, who want strong borders and security.

‘‘To Hillary Clinton, and to her donors and advisers, pushing her to spread smears and her lies about decent people, I have three words . . . shame on you.’’

A Reuters/Ipsos States of the Nation poll for the week beginning August 15 found Clinton beating Trump among Hispanic voters by 15 percentage points, and by 57 percentage points among black voters.

Trump has tried recently to broaden his appeal to them, hinting at a softening of his hardline position on immigratio­n.

In comments broadcast on Fox News Thursday, Trump said he would be willing to work with immigrants who have abided by US laws while living in the country, backing away from his insistence during the primaries that he would try to deport all 11 million illegal immigrants.

Trump also met with black and Latino Republican leaders at his headquarte­rs in New York City yesterday.

Trump’s efforts were unlikely to draw out minorities in his favour but could reassure some moderate Republican­s worried about his views on race, said Bernard Fraga, a political science professor at Indiana University.

‘‘I don’t think these efforts will do a lot to help him in minority communitie­s,’’ Fraga said.

An associatio­n of 40 Latino organisati­ons sent a letter yesterday calling on him to ‘‘cease’’ his rhetoric and meet with their leadership to discuss ways he could improve his outreach to Hispanics.

‘‘As we have expressed numerous times, your rhetoric of relentless attacks against our community is an issue of serious concern and has had a significan­t impact, fuelling an alarming trend in our nation,’’ the letter reads.

If the final vote, which is expected on Wednesday or Thursday, goes against Rousseff, it would confirm her vice-president, Michel Temer, as the country’s new leader for the rest of her fouryear term through to 2018, ending 13 years of Left-wing Workers Party rule.

Rousseff, a former leftist guerrilla, is charged with spending without congressio­nal approval and manipulati­ng government accounts to mask the extent of Brazil’s growing deficit in the runup to her 2014 re-election.

Her Senate supporters managed to discredit a key witness, a Federal Audit Court prosecutor who led the probe of Rousseff’s government, because he had taken part in an anti-Rousseff demonstrat­ion.

Lewandowsk­i ruled that Julio Marcelo de Oliveira could be questioned but his testimony would not count as proof, a developmen­t that is not expected to affect the outcome of a trial that is more political than judicial.

A survey published by O Globo newspaper showed that 52 senators were committed to voting to dismiss Rousseff, with only 19 supporting her and 10 undecided or not polled.

Rousseff has denied any wrongdoing and has described efforts to oust her as a ‘‘coup’’. She has refused to resign.

Temer’s Right-leaning government has sought to speed up the trial.

‘‘He’s taking hate groups mainstream and helping a radical fringe take over one of America’s two major political parties.’’ Hillary Clinton

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