Page Nav

HIDE

Gradient Skin

Gradient_Skin

Pages

Best Sellers

latest

Responsive Ad

Introducing his daughter Ivanka at Cleveland rally, Trump vows never to call women 'beautiful'

Introducing his daughter Ivanka at Cleveland rally, Trump vows never to call women 'beautiful' Back to Top Live coverage: See new u...

Introducing his daughter Ivanka at Cleveland rally, Trump vows never to call women 'beautiful'


Back to
Top Live coverage: See new updates Live coverage: See new updates
President Trump listens as his daughter, White House senior adviser Ivanka Trump, speaks during a campaign rally in Cleveland, on Monday. (Carlos Barria/Reuters)

President Trump told an Oh io crowd Monday that he would never call a woman beautiful again because it is now “politically incorrect.”

The remarks, part of an introduction of his daughter, Ivanka Trump, seemed a jab at the #MeToo movement.

“You’re not allowed to use the word ‘beautiful’ anymore when you talk about women. It’s politically incorrect,” Trump told the crowd in Cleveland, the first of three campaign stops on Monday. He then asked the men in the crowd to raise their hands and vow to never call women beautiful.

The president has at times in the past described his daughter as attractive, and the White House senior adviser brought a roar from the crowd in an arena near the airport.

Trump noted, after she left the stage, that he called Ivanka Trump “smart” but he didn’t say beautiful.

Trump used the bulk of his speech to hammer Democrats on the economy and immigration, calling Democratic gubernatorial nominee Richard Cordray “a bad person who w ill do a terrible job” and repeating a refrain he has often uttered over the past few weeks: “Democrats produce mobs. Republicans produce jobs.”

He also falsely claimed that Democrats want to allow undocumented immigrants into the country so they can vote, receive free education and all sorts of other perks.

“They want them to be able to vote,” Trump said.

Trump was in Ohio campaigning for gubernatorial nominee Mike DeWine, Senate nominee James B. Renacci and other GOP candidates.

â€" Josh Dawsey

On Tuesday, voters will weigh in on candidates for House, Senate and many races down the ballot. Lots of voters have already made choices in early voting, as multiple states have surpassed their 2014 early ballot levels. President Trump is hitting multiple states to make his closing argument, and former president Barack Obama and other Democrats are doing the same for their side.

Loading... Source: Google News | Netizen 24 United States

Reponsive Ads