Go to contents

Anti-Trump faction up in arm with Trump-like verbal attack

Anti-Trump faction up in arm with Trump-like verbal attack

Posted February. 29, 2016 07:06,   

Updated February. 29, 2016 07:16

한국어
“Rubio attacks Trump just like Trump.”

Fox News on Saturday commented as it is reporting a campaign of Senator Marco Rubio (aged 44, Florida) who made an explicit assault on the front runner of Republican primary Donald Trump (aged 69) by calling him a “con-artist.” It means that as Trump is making consecutive victories in the primaries, the “anti-Trump faction” has begun to make counterattacks in a way that Trump has done with his blunt verbal assaults. While on TV or on his campaign speeches on Friday, Rubio stressed that Donald Trump is a con-artist trying to hijack the conservative movement and the Republican Party, and he cannot be our nominee. When Trump misspelled on his tweets, Rubio mocked, “That's how they spell those words at the Wharton School of Business where he (Trump) went he must have hired a foreign worker to do his own tweets.”

The media who has been against Trump is showing even greater criticism on Donald Trump. Borrowing the famous phrase “You’re fired,” which Trump used to shout to apprentices in his TV reality show, the Economist published an article titled “Time to Fire Trump.” “He must be stopped. Almost the only policy Mr. Trump clearly subscribes to is a fantasy. Nobody has any idea,” the newspaper criticized. “Marco Rubio stands a better chance of beating Mr. Trump than anyone else. All the other candidates should get out of his way. If they decline to do so, it could soon be too late to prevent the party of Abraham Lincoln from being led into a presidential election by Donald Trump.”

In its editorial on Saturday, the New York Times bashed Governor Chris Christie of New Jersey who made an open endorsement for Donald Trump. “He’s a strong and resolute leader and he is someone who is going to lead the Republican Party to victory in November,” Christie said in his Texas speech on Friday after he dropped out of the Republic primary.

“During the final days of his failed campaign, Mr. Christie said of Mr. Trump: “We are not electing an entertainer in chief. Showmanship is fun, but it is not the kind of leadership that will truly change America," the newspaper said. "Consistency has never been Mr. Christie’s strong suit and now, facing the end of a so-far disastrous second term as governor, Mr. Christie needs a new job.” It continued its sarcasm, “Trump might want to consider Mr. Christie for transportation secretary, since he already knows so much about traffic patterns on commuter bridges.” Christie was once investigated for “bridge scandal” that he purposely caused traffic jam on George Washington Bridge in order to put David Amlen, then New Jersey governor, in trouble.



뉴욕=부형권특파원 bookum90@donga.com