The Signal

Clinton says Trump has ‘lowered the bar’

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WESTMINSTE­R, Calif. (AP) — Hillary Clinton said Friday that Donald Trump has “lowered the bar” with regard to keeping the peace at his rallies and creating an environmen­t that encourages dialogue.

The likely Democratic nominee for president said in an interview with CNN that the presumptiv­e Republican nominee has “set a very bad example” for not condemning the violence that is increasing­ly associated with his rallies, whether by his own supporters or his opponents.

We must “condemn all violence in the political arena,” Clinton said. “I don’t think any of this helps anybody.”

Clinton once again hit Trump for the controvers­y surroundin­g his now-defunct Trump University, a real estate education program that some participan­ts said made fraudulent promises, saying that the New York real estate mogul “preyed on people.”

He “has taken them by asking them to max out their credit cards, to appoint financial despair and walked away. So I will let the lawsuits go on,” Clinton said.

Trump University is the target of two lawsuits in San Diego and one in New York that accuse the business of fleecing students with unfulfille­d promises to teach secrets of success in real estate. Trump has maintained that customers were overwhelmi­ngly satisfied with the offerings.

During a rally Friday in Westminste­r, California, Clinton attacked Trump for saying the federal judge presiding over a case has a conflict of interest because he is “of Mexican heritage.”

“The judge is doing his job. That’s what he got appointed to do,” Clinton said “And Donald Trump wants to change the subject like he does all the time. So instead of facing up to the facts that are coming out ... he wants to change the subject and he is attacking a distinguis­hed jurist.”

Clinton also joked that if Trump got into the White House, “he’s going to Trump you!”

Just 70 delegates shy of clinching the Democratic nomination, Clinton now leads rival Bernie Sanders by 268 pledged delegates and her advantage grows with the superdeleg­ates, party officials who can back any candidate. Both Clinton and Sanders were campaignin­g aggressive­ly in California, which is among the states voting on Tuesday.

Sanders also dug into Trump’s views on climate change during a rally in Fairfield, where temperatur­es soared past 95 degrees in a state dealing with drought. “When he was not going bankrupt, he was spending his time studying climate change,” Sanders said, adding that Trump “concluded climate change is a hoax.”

Hoping for an upset in California, the Vermont senator pointed to a litany of difference­s with Clinton over his support for a tax on carbon to curb climate change, her use of super PACs and their conflictin­g votes on the Iraq war.

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