Clinton hits Trump over comments on women
ahead of vice presidential debate
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[October 05, 2016]
By Amanda Becker
HAVERFORD, Pa. (Reuters) - Democrat Hillary
Clinton slammed Republican Donald Trump on Tuesday for making
disparaging comments about women's physical appearance, accusing Trump
of taking the issue of female body image "to a new level of difficulty
and meanness."
Hours before vice presidential candidates Tim Kaine and Mike Pence face
off in Virginia in their sole debate, Clinton urged women at an event in
the Philadelphia suburbs billed as a "family town hall" to stand up to
online bullying about how they look.
"It's shocking when women are called names and judged solely on the
basis of physical attributes," the Democratic presidential nominee said
in response to a 15-year-old girl's question about the problem of body
image and the "damage Donald Trump does" when he talks about how women
look.
"My opponent insulted Miss Universe," Clinton said, resurrecting her
Republican rival's comments last week about former beauty queen Alicia
Machado's weight gain after she won the Miss Universe contest in 1996.
"I mean, how do you get more acclaimed than that? But it wasn't good
enough," Clinton said. "We can't take any of this seriously anymore. We
need to laugh at it. We need to refute it."
Clinton, the first woman to be nominated for the presidency by a major
U.S. party, has rushed to capitalize on Trump's public feud with
Machado, whom he once called "Miss Piggy" because of her weight gain,
and make inroads with women voters five weeks before the Nov. 8
election.
Clinton's and Trump's running mates, Democrat Kaine, a U.S. senator, and
Republican Pence, governor of Indiana, will meet in a debate in
Farmville, Virginia, starting at 9 p.m. on Tuesday (0100 GMT on
Wednesday.)
The debate will provide voters their first extended chance to evaluate
the No. 2's in the White House race and is the only showdown between the
vice presidential candidates. Trump and Clinton will meet in their
second debate on Sunday.
Pence could find himself frequently on the defensive about Trump, a New
York businessman who has been dealing with a torrent of bad news in the
past week.
That includes a New York Times report that Trump took an almost $1
billion loss in 1995 that may have allowed him to avoid paying federal
income taxes for up to 18 years. While Democrats have slammed him over
the report, Trump, who made much of his business acumen on the campaign
trail, has said he "brilliantly used" U.S. tax rules to his advantage to
limit his tax bills.
Clinton disagreed, telling reporters on Tuesday it showed
"unequivocally" that Trump was a failure at business for losing $1
billion to begin with.
A Reuters/Ipsos opinion poll released on Tuesday said 67 percent of
Americans believed it was "selfish" for a presidential candidate to pay
no taxes, although 46 percent thought a candidate who paid no taxes was
"smart."
'HARMFUL COMMENTS'
Clinton also criticized Trump for appearing to suggest on Monday that
veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress were not strong enough to
handle the stress of war. Trump and his campaign said his words were
taken out of context.
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Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton answers a question
from the audience at a "Family Town Hall" campaign stop in
Haverford, Pennsylvania, U.S.October 4, 2016. REUTERS/Brian Snyder
"When people come back from war and combat, and they see things that
maybe a lot of folks in this room have seen many times over - and
you're strong and you can handle it - but a lot of people can't
handle it," Trump told a veterans group on Monday.
Clinton said troops deserved a commander in chief who understood
their sacrifice.
"Donald Trump's comments are not just ignorant, they are harmful
because they give voice to the stigma that has led generations of
veterans to hide their struggles instead of getting lifesaving
help," she said.
On the campaign trail on Tuesday, Trump met with about a dozen
energy executives in Denver, querying them mainly about their
concerns about regulations he said had "gotten out of control."
John Harpole, chief executive of Mercator Energy, said he did not
understand why the Obama administration’s response to the shale boom
and Clinton’s energy positions had not come up during the first
presidential debate last week.
Others told Trump they faced more immediate concerns with
state-level regulators. Scott Stewart of Gilbert-Stewart Operating
said his company had largely moved operations to Kansas because of
stiff rules in Colorado.
Trump also reveled in comments on Monday by Clinton's husband,
former President Bill Clinton, who said small-business people and
people who make too much to get federal subsidies to help with
insurance payments were "getting killed" by the federal healthcare
law known as Obamacare.
Trump has promised to repeal Obamacare, while Hillary Clinton has
praised it but said she would work to improve aspects of it.
"I bet he went through hell last night, can you imagine?" Trump said
of Bill Clinton during a rally in Prescott, Arizona. "He went
through hell, but honestly there have been many nights when he has
gone through hell with Hillary."
Clinton has led Trump in national opinion polls in recent months. On
Tuesday, an average of polls aggregated by RealClearPolitics website
showed her with 48.1 percent of support compared with Trump's 44.3
percent.
(Writing by John Whitesides; Additional reporting by Emily
Stephenson in Colorado and Chris Kahn in New York; Editing by
Frances Kerry and Peter Cooney)
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