The Citizen (KZN)

Trump ‘bad’ for US – challenger

AIMS FOR WHITE HOUSE AFTER ‘ANTICS’ ‘He thinks he has to humiliate whoever he’s dealing with or else he’s half a man.’

- Washington

Former Massachuse­tts governor Bill Weld, the first Republican to challenge President Donald Trump for their party’s presidenti­al nomination in 2020, said six more years of Trump’s “antics” in the White House would be bad for America.

Weld said the national emergency that Trump declared on Friday to obtain funding for a wall at the US-Mexico border showed his readiness to divide the country.

“I don’t think he knows how to act. He thinks he has to humiliate whoever he’s dealing with or else he’s half a man,” Weld told ABC’s This Week in an interview.

“The emergency declaratio­n is just one example of that. Congress thought they had a deal. He says: ‘Oh, you think you have a deal? I’m going to show you a deal. I’m going to show you who’s boss,’” he added.

Weld, 73, said on Friday he was pursuing a Republican primary challenge against Trump in 2020.

It would be a longshot bid as opinion polls show Trump’s re-election is overwhelmi­ngly supported by Republican voters, but Weld defended his own candidacy.

“It is part of my thinking to make sure he doesn’t repeat, we don’t have six more years of the antics,” Weld said. “That would be bad for the country.”

Other Republican­s have flirted with the idea of challengin­g Trump, including former Ohio governor John Kasich and former senator Jeff Flake of Arizona.

Weld ran as the Libertaria­n Party’s vice-presidenti­al candidate in 2016 and returned to the Republican Party this year. He now intends to take aim at Trump policies that have pushed the US budget deficits to nearly $1 trillion (R14 trillion) a year.

“The president is reckless in spending. They’re spending $1 trillion a year. They don’t have that. It’s going to crush Generation Xers and millennial­s,” he said.

Weld also dismissed his own Republican critics who have accused him of switching allegiance­s and who say they want Trump to run without a primary challenger in 2020. “I think it’s not what the country needs, to put it mildly,” he said.

It’s not what the country needs, to put it mildly.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa