Daily Mail

‘SEND HER BACK’ — THE BACKLASH

Row deepens as baying Trump fans aim ‘toxic’ chant at Muslim congresswo­man

- TOM LEONARD

Donald Trump and his supporters faced a backlash last night as even Republican­s condemned a rally in which the US President’s fans chanted ‘Send her back’ about a Muslim congresswo­man.

Sensing the mood, Mr Trump distanced himself from his supporters’ chants, saying: ‘I felt a little bit badly about it.’

Mr Trump escalated his row with four Left- wing, ethnic minority US congresswo­men – known as ‘ The Squad’ – at Wednesday’s campaign rally in north Carolina.

Thousands of supporters cheered Mr Trump as he again accused Alexandria OcasioCort­ez, Rashida Tlaib, Ayanna Pressley and Ilhan Omar of ‘hating’ America.

Three are US-born while Miss Omar emigrated to the US as a young child from war-torn Somalia. Mr Trump has urged all of them to return to their country of origin and try living there.

Miss Omar became the chief tar-

‘Whipped up a toxic brew’

get of the crowd on Wednesday as Mr Trump recited a litany of complaints about her. Pausing for 11 seconds when the crowd started their chants, the President appeared to relish the sound of ‘Send her back’ – which echoed the ‘Lock her up’ mantra used against Hillary Clinton in his 2016 election rallies.

Ahead of the rally, Mr Trump referred to long- standing slurs against Miss Omar by her opponents, who accused her of marrying her brother for immigratio­n purposes, a claim she has dismissed as ‘disgusting lies’.

Mr Trump said: ‘There’s a lot of talk about the fact that she was married to her brother. I know nothing about it. I hear she was married to her brother.’

But amid widespread condemnati­on of the chants, Mr Trump later said: ‘I would say that I was not happy with it. I disagreed with it. But again I didn’t say that. They did. And I disagreed with it.’ He did not say if he would ask his supporters to stop such behaviour.

Mr Trump was condemned by senior Democrats, with Senator Chuck Schumer saying he ‘whipped up a toxic brew of racism, xenophobia and nativism’. Presidenti­al contender Kamala Harris said he had ‘defiled the office of President’, while rival Bernie Sanders accused Mr Trump of ‘ stoking the most despicable and disturbing currents in our society’. Miss Omar dubbed Mr Trump a ‘fascist’.

House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy said their chants ‘have no place in our party and no place in this country’. Republican congressma­n Adam Kinzinger tweeted that the ‘Send her back’ chant was ‘ugly, wrong, & would send chills down the spines of our Founding Fathers’.

However, Republican­s who condemned the crowd held off on the President. Mr McCarthy, a key Trump ally, insisted the aversion to Miss Omar was based on ideology, not race. ‘This is about socialism versus freedom,’ he said.

In Britain, Foreign Secretary and Tory leadership contender Jeremy Hunt said: ‘There is absolutely no place in this country for the language that the President used, which is totally offensive.’

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn branded Mr Trump a ‘racist’ on Twitter. ‘If Boris Johnson and Jeremy Hunt won’t use ‘‘the R word’’, I will: Donald Trump telling four congresswo­men of colour to ‘‘go back’’ is racist,’ he said. ‘The two contenders to be prime minister should call out this far-Right hate speech for what it is.’

Without naming Mr Trump, Home Secretary Sajid Javid will also make his own view clear today. ‘I’m from an immigrant family. I know what it’s like to be told to go back where I came from,’ he will say in a speech about extremism.

Trump supporters have noted that in Mr Trump’s original attack on The Squad at the weekend, he did not call for forcible repatriati­on, as some are claiming, since he then suggested the women come back to the US.

He said on Twitter: ‘Why don’t they go back and help fix the totally broken and crime infested places from which they came. Then come back and show us how it is done.’

Mr Trump came under additional pressure yesterday as unsealed court documents indicated the FBI believed the President and his press secretary were involved in discussion­s that led to an illegal hush-money payment to porn star Stormy Daniels in the 2016 election campaign.

The newly-revealed FBI report claimed Mr Trump and Hope Hicks spoke repeatedly with Michael Cohen, Mr Trump’s exlawyer, in October 2016 when Miss Daniels threatened to sell her story about her affair with the tycoon. The evidence suggests that Miss Hicks – a Trump loyalist who has left the White House – might have lied to the FBI.

rebuked her for suggesting Israeli money was paying for their support.

She antagonise­d both Democrats and republican­s by appearing blasé about the 9/11 attacks in which nearly 3,000 people died. In April she referred to 9/ 11 by saying ‘some people did something’ for which all American Muslims were suffering infringeme­nts of their civil liberties.

Mr Trump accused her of supporting terrorists and she has since received death threats. But whichever way one looks at it, her rise is astonishin­g. Her mother died when she was two and she moved to the US with her family in the 1990s to escape Somalia’s civil war.

She became a US citizen at 17, studied politics and internatio­nal affairs, won a seat in the Minnesota congress in 2016 and two years later a congressio­nal seat in Washington.

Time magazine featured her as one of the ‘women who are changing the world’. But Americans are sharply divided over whether she is changing it for the better – or worse.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Fan base: Supporters at the campaign rally cheer for President Trump, left
Fan base: Supporters at the campaign rally cheer for President Trump, left
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Fighter: Ilhan Omar fled the civil war in Somalia aged 12
Fighter: Ilhan Omar fled the civil war in Somalia aged 12

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom