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Trump says sexism not to blame for end of Warren's campaign

Associated Press
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AP
President Donald Trump listens to a question Friday as he talks to reporters during a signing of a spending bill to combat the coronavirus at the White House.

WASHINGTON — “Lack of talent.” Unlikable. “Mean.”

President Donald Trump laced into former Democratic candidate Elizabeth Warren on Friday, insisting that sexism wasn’t to blame for the end of the Massachusetts senator’s presidential campaign.

Speaking to reporters as he signed an emergency $8.3 billion funding package to help tackle the coronavirus outbreak, Trump was asked whether he thought sexism had anything to do with Warren’s departure from the Democratic presidential race.

“No, I think lack of talent was her problem. She has a tremendous lack of talent,” Trump responded. The president commended her debate performances, saying she “was a good debater” who had “destroyed” the candidacy of former New York Mayor Mike Bloomberg “like it was nothing.”

“But people don’t like her,” he went on to say. “She’s a very mean person. … People don’t want that. They like a person like me, that’s not mean.”

Trump has a long history of making less-than-kind comments. While he has defended himself as an equal-opportunity insulter, Trump has had some particularly harsh comments about women, going after their physical appearances, comparing them to animals and seeming to dwell on their attacks on him.

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AP
Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., with her husband Bruce Mann beside her, addressed the media outside her home Thursday in Cambridge, Mass., after she dropped out of the Democratic presidential race.

After moderator Megyn Kelly confronted Trump during the first Republican debate of the 2016 cycle over his comments about women, Trump later said of her: “You could see there was blood coming out of her eyes, blood coming out of her wherever.”

Warren dropped out of the race Thursday after a disappointing showing in early-state voting, including failing to win a single Super Tuesday state. Trump’s campaign had once seen her a potentially formidable challenger, and Trump went after her early, derisively labeling her “Pocahontas” over her claims of Native American heritage.

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Categories: News | Politics Election
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