Tech
CEO Whitman calls Trump 'unfit' to be U.S. president
Send a link to a friend
[February 29, 2016]
By Jonathan Allen
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Meg Whitman, the head
of technology firm Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co <HPE.N>, said on Sunday
that Donald Trump was "unfit" for the U.S. presidency, and criticized
New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, whose failed presidential bid she
supported, for endorsing him.
|
But, later in the day, Trump picked up another high-profile
endorsement, from U.S. Senator Jeff Sessions of Alabama, a leading
conservative.
Trump's insurgent campaign has riven the Republican Party, with
party leaders openly discussing how to thwart the will of the tens
of thousands of members who have voted for Trump, helping him
comfortably win in three of the four states that have so far held
nominating contests.
Party leaders are nervous that Trump, a billionaire real-estate
developer from New York City who deviates from some of the central
tenets of Republican conservatism, may alienate voters if he is
their candidate in the Nov. 8 general election. He has proposed
banning Muslims from entering the United States and declined a
journalist's invitation on Sunday to condemn the Ku Klux Klan, the
violent white-supremacist group.
Christie, who scrapped his own presidential bid earlier this month,
became the most prominent Republican figure to break ranks with
party leadership by endorsing Trump on Friday ahead of this week's
"Super Tuesday" contests, when voters in 11 states go to the polls.
Whitman, who was a co-chairwoman of the national finance committee
of Christie's campaign, said in a statement to reporters that Trump
would take the country on "a dangerous journey" and that Christie
was aware of this.
"Chris Christie's endorsement of Donald Trump is an astonishing
display of political opportunism. Donald Trump is unfit to be
president", said the statement from Whitman, who is chief executive
and president of Hewlett Packard Enterprise and chairman of HP Inc
<HPQ.N>.
She called on Christie's donors not to follow him to Trump, who has
predominantly funded his campaign with personal loans.
Representatives of Christie and Trump did not respond to requests
for comment.
Earlier on Sunday, Trump was asked repeatedly if he would
unequivocally condemn the Klan and other support from white
supremacists.
"I don't know anything about what you're even talking about with
white supremacy or white supremacists," Trump told CNN's Jake Tapper
after being asked about his endorsement by David Duke, a former Klan
leader. "If you would send me a list of the groups, I will do
research on them and certainly I would disavow if I thought there
was something wrong."
Previously, Trump had seemed less uncertain about his views on Duke.
"David Duke endorsed me?" he said in a response to a reporter.
"Alright. I disavow. OK?"
[to top of second column] |
His latest backer, Senator Sessions, has had to defend his own
controversial comments about the Klan in the past. In 1986, he
admitted during an unsuccessful confirmation hearing to become a
federal judge that he had said he thought the Klan was "OK" until he
came to believe that some members smoked marijuana. He explained
that these remarks were a joke and has since called the Klan
"destestable."
In a separate interview on Sunday, Trump also defended posting on
his Twitter account a quote sometimes attributed to Italian fascist
leader Benito Mussolini. He told NBC News he did not realize that
the quote - "It is better to live one day as a lion than 100 years
as a sheep" - was associated Mussolini but said it did not matter
because it was a good aphorism all the same.
Many party leaders hope U.S. Senator Marco Rubio of Florida will
somehow overtake Trump before the party's nominating convention in
July, despite Rubio's not having won any states and lagging behind
in Trump in opinion polls.
In recent days, Rubio has taken to adopting Trump's habit of using
adolescent insults to denigrate his rival, suggesting on Friday that
Trump urinated in his trousers during last week's televised debate.
Rubio and U.S. Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, the only Republican to yet
beat Trump in a primary election, both criticized Trump's reticence
to speak ill of the Klan on Sunday.
"We cannot be a party that nominates someone who refused to condemn
white supremacists and the Ku Klux Klan," Rubio told a crowd of
voters in Purcellville, Virginia, MSNBC reported.
(Additional reporting by Alana Wise in Washington; Editing by
Jonathan Oatis)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|