Combative Trump says he raised $5.6
million for vets, bashes media
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[June 01, 2016]
By Emily Flitter and Jonathan Allen
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Republican
presidential candidate Donald Trump on Tuesday detailed $5.6 million in
contributions he raised for military veterans, and staged a fiery news
conference where he attacked reporters for questioning him for months
about the money.
Appearing at Trump Tower in Manhattan, the billionaire accused the
media of failing to give him credit for raising the funds at an
event in January in Iowa.
His tirade, in which he called one reporter "a sleaze" and
sarcastically described another as a "real beauty," overshadowed
what otherwise should have been an upbeat event for the presumptive
Republican nominee.
"The press should be ashamed of themselves," he told reporters
gathered before him. "You make me look very bad. I’ve never received
such bad publicity for doing a good job."
While Trump has long had an adversarial relationship with the media,
questions about the donations to veterans touched a raw nerve with
him as he tries to build a conservative base ahead of the Nov. 8
general election.
Reporters have been persistently asking whether Trump in fact raised
all the money he said he had in January and why it took so long to
hand donations over to veterans groups.
A number of veterans groups listed by Trump on Tuesday as recipients
confirmed they had received the donation as listed, ranging from
$25,000 to, in one case, $1.1 million, which went to the Marine
Corps Law Enforcement Foundation.
Some of the donations arrived in February or March, some as recently
as last week around the time a critical article appeared in The
Washington Post. The money arrived in the form of a check from the
Donald J. Trump Foundation.
“We received a $75,000 gift early last week from the Trump
Foundation, it was not restricted or earmarked in any way," said
Katherine Fritz, director of development at America’s Vetdogs.
Trump's criticism of the media dashed the hopes of some Republican
leaders who want him to tone down his rhetoric and become more
magnanimous now that he has sealed the Republican presidential
nomination.
The Washington Post said Trump only handed over a personal donation
of $1 million last week - four months after announcing it - once the
newspaper started asking about the money.
Trump said the news coverage of his veterans group donations had
been close to libelous. Asked whether he would maintain an
adversarial stance with reporters if elected president, Trump said:
"Yeah, it's going to be like this."
A reporter told Trump he seemed resistant to the kind of scrutiny
that comes with the office of U.S. president.
But Ari Fleischer, a former White House press secretary for
President George W. Bush, said the news media should stop fretting
about how Trump treats them.
"My advice to the press: Stop interviewing yourselves about Trump's
attack on the press. Don't worry about it. Just do your jobs and be
fair," he said.
The contretemps took place on the same day documents were disclosed
from a lawsuit involving Trump University, a now-defunct education
program that ran a real estate training program.
Trump has attacked the presiding judge as hostile to him.
[to top of second column] |
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump holds up a list of
veterans groups he says he has donated to during a news conference
at Trump Tower in the Manhattan borough of New York, U.S., May 31,
2016. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri
The university documents showed Trump University created a special
class to teach students how to cash in on U.S. mortgage foreclosures
when the United States was struggling with an entrenched housing
crisis in 2009.
CLINTON POLL LEAD
Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Clinton sought to take
advantage of Trump's discomfort over the media scrutiny he has
faced. She told CNN that Trump's tendency to attack his critics "is
a recipe for gridlock in Washington."
Clinton defended her own policy toward dealing with the news media,
saying she has conducted 300 interviews this year alone. Unlike
Trump, she rarely holds news conferences. Her last one was last
December.
Clinton leads Trump by 11 percentage points in the latest Reuters/Ipsos
opinion poll. According to the May 27-31 survey of likely voters, 46
percent support the former U.S. secretary of state while 35 percent
back Trump.
California Governor Jerry Brown on Tuesday endorsed Clinton for the
Democratic nomination, saying it was the only way to "stop the
dangerous candidacy of Donald Trump."
At his news conference, Trump also bristled at the possibility that
Republicans opposed to him might run a third-party candidate as an
alternative to Trump or the expected Democratic nominee Clinton.
He said a leader of that effort, Bill Kristol, editor of The Weekly
Standard magazine, "looks like such a fool."
"Let me tell you these people are losers," said Trump, adding that a
third-party candidacy would guarantee Clinton wins the White House
and deny Republicans the chance to put conservatives on the Supreme
Court.
"What you’re going to do is lose the election for the Republicans
and therefore you lose the Supreme Court," he said.
Trump read out a list of veterans' organizations that had received
money from the January event, which he attended instead of
participating in a Fox News-sponsored candidates' debate. He said
the money was benefiting 41 groups and that the total cash raised
could climb as more comes in.
He turned the microphone over briefly to Al Baldasaro, a Trump
supporter and a veteran from New Hampshire who also skewered the
news media, saying reporters should "get your head out of your butt,
focus on the real issues."
(Additional reporting by Amanda Becker and Doina Chiacu in
Washington; Writing by Steve Holland; Editing by Alistair Bell and
Howard Goller)
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