Lodi News-Sentinel

Trump seeks to disavow ‘send her back’ chant

- By Noah Bierman

WASHINGTON — The morning after chants of “Send her back” rang across one of his campaign rallies, President Donald Trump sought to disavow it, insisting that he “was not happy with it.”

Trump made no effort to stop the chanting during his rally in North Carolina on Wednesday night. The crowd broke into the chant after Trump began cataloging grievances against Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota.

But “I was not happy with it — I disagree with it,” Trump told reporters during a photo session in the Oval Office on Thursday morning.

His disavowal of the chants was rare for a president who hates to appear as if he is either apologizin­g or bowing to pressure to appear “politicall­y correct.”

It could also put Trump in an awkward position if he renews his criticism of Omar and three other women lawmakers of color who have been his targets over the past week.

The “Send her back” chant echoed Trump’s own words in a tweet earlier this week in which he said that “progressiv­e Democrat congresswo­men” could “go back” to the “totally broken and crime infested places from which they came.” And at the rally, shortly after the chanting, Trump said, “Hey, if they don’t like it, let them leave, let them leave. Right? Let them leave.”

His apparent turnaround came after a growing number of Republican congressio­nal leaders criticized the chant, but sought to put distance between the crowd and the president.

The need to repudiate the chant was a topic at a breakfast Thursday that members of the Republican leadership had with Vice President Mike Pence.

Rep. Mark Walker of North Carolina, who had been at the rally, told Pence that the chant was “something that we want to address early,” Walker told reporters.

“We cannot be defined by this,” Walker said, adding that he found the chant “offensive.”

Pence’s office didn’t respond to requests for comment. Later in the morning, Republican leaders began publicly criticizin­g the chant while insisting that the crowd, not the president, was at fault.

“There’s no place for that kind of talk,” Rep. Tom Emmer of Minnesota, head of the Republican congressio­nal campaign committee, said at a breakfast for reporters sponsored by the Christian Science Monitor.

Rep. Kevin McCarthy, RBakersfie­ld, one of Trump’s strongest allies on Capitol Hill, weighed in as well, telling reporters that “those chants have no place in our party or our country.”

Later, at a news conference, McCarthy avoided repeating his criticism and defended Trump, saying that “the president did not join in” the chanting. “The president moved on.”

 ?? TRAVIS LONG/THE NEWS & OBSERVER ?? President Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally Wednesday at East Carolina University in Greenville, NC.
TRAVIS LONG/THE NEWS & OBSERVER President Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally Wednesday at East Carolina University in Greenville, NC.

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