The Scotsman

Barack Obama declares Donald Trump is ‘unfit’ to be president

● Time to say ‘enough’ president tells rivals ● Republican claims US election will be rigged

- By JONATHAN LEMIRE

President Barack Obama has said that Donald Trump is unfit to be president and “he keeps proving it”.

Obama was speaking during a news conference with the prime minister of Singapore, who is visiting the White House.

The president is challengin­g Republican leaders to withdraw their endorsemen­ts of Trump.

Obama said Trump’s criticism of a fallen Muslim-american soldier’s family is the latest evidence that the GOP presidenti­al nominee is unfit to lead America.

“There has to come a point at which you say: ‘Enough’,” Mr Obama said.

At last week’s Democratic National Convention, Khizr Khan – a Muslim whose son was killed serving in the US military in Iraq – criticised Mr Trump’s plan to temporaril­y ban Muslims from entering the US.

Mr Trump responded by attacking the “Gold Star” family, the term for families that have lost a relative in war. Democratic and Republican leaders as well as veterans’ groups quickly condemned him.

Mr Trump struck back by questionin­g whether Ghazala Khan had been allowed to speak. She said she is still too grief-stricken by her son’s death.

He has also suggested that he fears the general election in November “is going to be rigged” – an unpreceden­ted assertion by a presidenti­al candidate.

Trump’s extraordin­ary claim – one he did not back up with any immediate evidence – would, if it became more than just an offhand comment, seem to threaten the tradition of peacefully contested elections and challenge the very essence of a fair democratic process.

“I’m afraid the election is going to be rigged, I have to be honest,” the Republican nominee told a town hall crowd in Columbus, Ohio.

He added that he has been hearing “more and more” that the election may not be contested fairly, though he did not elaborate further.

Trump made the claim after first suggesting that the Democrats had fixed their primary system so Hillary Clinton could defeat Bernie Sanders. Trump has previously backed up that thought by pointing to hacked e-mails from the national party that appeared to indicate a preference for Clinton. Still, the former secretary of state received 3.7 million more votes than Sanders nationwide and had establishe­d a clear lead in delegates by 1 March.

The celebrity businessma­n – who has been known to dabble in conspiracy theories, including claims that President Barack Obama was not born in the US and, more recently, that Senator Ted Cruz’s father was an associate of President John F Kennedy’s assassin – also claimed that the Republican nomination would have been stolen from him had he not won by significan­t margins.

He then asserted that November’s general election may not be on the up-and-up.

Mr Trump repeated the charge on Fox News, saying: “November 8th, we’d better be careful, because that election is going to be rigged. And I hope the Republican­s are watching closely or it’s going to be taken away from us.”

Requests to Trump’s campaign for additional explanatio­n were not returned.

The statement could be an effort by Trump to lay the groundwork of an excuse if he loses the general election. But if he were to be defeated in November and then publicly declare that the election results were bogus, his claim could yield unpredicta­ble reactions from his supporters and fellow Republican­s.

Trump said Sanders “made a deal with the devil,” and said of Clinton: “She’s the devil.”

 ?? PICTURE: GETTY IMAGES ?? 0 Donald Trump is under attack even from some in his own party over his criticism of the mother of a US Muslim soldier killed in Iraq
PICTURE: GETTY IMAGES 0 Donald Trump is under attack even from some in his own party over his criticism of the mother of a US Muslim soldier killed in Iraq
 ??  ?? 0 Barack Obama launched attack on Republican candidate
0 Barack Obama launched attack on Republican candidate

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