Clinton knocks Trump for cheering housing
bubble burst
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[May 25, 2016]
By Amanda Becker
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Democrat Hillary
Clinton, seeking to dampen Republican presidential candidate Donald
Trump's growing appeal with working-class voters, on Tuesday accused him
of having cheered on the 2008 housing market crash.
Clinton's campaign released an ad with audio that the presumptive
Republican nominee recorded in 2006 for his now-defunct Trump
University venture. Trump, a billionaire real estate developer, in
remarks on a "bubble burst," said: "I sort of hope that happens
because then people like me would go in and buy" property and "make
a lot of money."
Clinton's campaign and her surrogates used the recording to argue
that she would take better care of the U.S. economy. Clinton is
seeking to blunt the inroads that Trump has been making with voters
in crucial states such as Florida and Ohio.
Trump defended his comments on Tuesday evening at a rally in
Albuquerque, New Mexico, saying buying when the housing market was
down showed smart dealmaking skills that he would bring to the White
House.
"I'm a businessman, that's what I'm supposed to do," Trump said. "I
feel badly for everybody. What am I going to do? I'm in business."
The New Yorker also impersonated Clinton on the campaign trail, who
he said "screams," and said other big names in business did similar
deals as he did before the housing crisis.
Trump has never held elected office and often touts his history as a
businessman in response to accusations that he is unprepared to
assume the presidency.
Anti-Trump protestors and police clashed outside the Albuquerque
convention center on Tuesday when protestors tried to storm the
center, calling for an end to the Trump rally.
Albuquerque police said on Twitter that protestors threw rocks and
bottles and a door to the facility appeared to have been hit with
something. Police said the only arrests so far had been inside the
rally, where Trump was interrupted multiple times by protestors.
Opinion polls in key states show Clinton, the front-runner for the
Democratic nomination, and Trump in a tight race ahead of the Nov. 8
U.S. presidential election. Nationally, Trump has been rising in
polls to pull roughly even with Clinton.
U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren, a Democrat who is a favorite of
financial reformers, bashed Trump in prepared remarks released ahead
of a speech in Washington on Tuesday. Trump's 2006 comments, she
said, amounted to rooting for "people to get thrown out on the
street." "The rest of us were horrified by the 2008 financial crisis," Warren
said in the comments. "But Donald Trump was drooling over the idea
of a housing meltdown – because it meant he could buy up a bunch
more property on the cheap."
Warren also criticized Trump for saying in a Reuters interview last
week that the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial oversight law, enacted in
response to the crisis, made it hard for bankers to operate.
"Let me find the world's smallest violin to play a sad, sad song,"
Warren said. "Can Donald Trump even name three things that
Dodd-Frank does? Seriously, someone ask him."
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Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton gestures to
supporters at the IBEW union hall in Commerce, California, U.S., May
24, 2016. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
Trump did not directly respond to Warren's comments on Tuesday, but
he called her a "total failure" as a U.S. senator during the rally.
Clinton surrogates from Ohio and Florida held a conference call with
reporters about Trump's housing statements. Her campaign hosted
related events in Virginia, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, Iowa,
Colorado and Nevada, which will all be battlegrounds in November's
general election.
"How could Trump possibly champion the collapse of the housing
market and our economy?" U.S. Representative Tim Ryan of Ohio said
on the call.
Clinton is still fighting on two fronts as she seeks to wrap up her
primary battle with Democratic rival Bernie Sanders, a U.S. senator
from Vermont.
Clinton and Sanders both campaigned on Tuesday in California, which
is among six states holding Democratic nominating contests on June
7. California, the most populous U.S. state, has more Democratic
delegates than any other state, and Sanders has invested heavily
there.
Clinton needs a solid win in California for a strong finish heading
into her party's national convention in July and to dispel questions
about whether she can unite the party after a drawn-out,
increasingly bitter primary race.
Clinton on Monday turned down an invitation by Fox News to debate
Sanders in California despite having agreed previously to a May
debate. Her campaign said Clinton's time would be better spent
meeting directly with California voters. Sanders said her refusal
was an insult to California voters.
Sanders on Tuesday requested that the state of Kentucky review his
loss there last week to Clinton by fewer than 2,000 votes.
Kentucky's secretary of state, Alison Grimes, said in a statement
that the state will recanvas the results at all 120 county boards of
election.
(Additional reporting by Alana Wise and Doina Chiacu in Washington
and Emily Stephenson in Albuquerque, New Mexico; Editing by Jonathan
Oatis, Leslie Adler and Michael Perry)
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