Cape Times

De facto Republican leader slams Trump for Muslim ‘shutdown’ tirade

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LONDON: In an extraordin­ary departure from political etiquette, the top leadership of the Republican Party denounced its own presidenti­al frontrunne­r, Donald Trump, yesterday for urging a “total and complete shutdown” of Muslims entering the US in the wake of the San Bernardino mass shooting.

As criticism rained down on Trump from many quarters, including from most of his rivals for the Republican nod, it was the decision by the House Speaker Paul Ryan to scold him publicly that stood out. As Speaker, Ryan is second in line to the presidency and thus the de facto leader of his party for the time being. He also carries heft as the vicepresid­ential candidate in 2012.

Ryan’s comments, made during a press conference on Capitol Hill which was devoted to discussing steps that the US Congress is taking to toughen the screening of foreigners coming to the US, echoed those made by others in the party, including the former vice-president Dick Cheney, not usually a moderating force.

Ryan said commenting on the party's struggle to find a nominee would normally be inappropri­ate for the Speaker.

“I will make an exception,” he said, adding that the comments made by Trump were “not who we are as a party or as a country.

“This is not conservati­vism... Some of our best and biggest allies in this struggle and fight against radical Islam terror are Muslims.”

It was notable that Trump issued his incendiary proposal late on Monday, hours after a new poll from Iowa, which will kick off the state-by-state process of picking party nominees with caucus voting on February 1, showed him slipping into second place behind Senator Ted Cruz from Texas.

If it was his calculatio­n that issuing the statement would return the focus to his campaign, he was not wrong. That statement said, in part, that he wanted, “a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the US until our country’s representa­tives can figure out what is going on”.

It was made in response to the shootings of 14 people in San Bernardino, California, last week, carried out by a radicalise­d married couple.

Trump continued to defend his proposal yesterday, although he said American Muslims who had left the country for a trip would be allowed back in. He repeatedly insisted the US was “at war” with radical Muslims committed to jihad.

The latest of a series of garish balloons of varying degrees of offensiven­ess released by Trump, this episode more than any other will stoke fears inside the party that unless he is brought to heel he will wreck its brand and its chances of winning back the White House. – The Independen­t

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