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US election: Trump v Clinton
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Sullivan Wood, 4, and her mother Jennifer Jones, who is a Hillary Clinton supporter, stands up close for an address by Donald Trump in North Charleston. Photo: Reuters

'Hill’s shrill': Trump brands Clinton 'sha-riiiiill', but insists he's no sexist

Donald Trump said during a campaign speech that Hillary Clinton is “shrill”, raising his voice several octaves to get the point across.

“Hillary, who is very shrill - do you know the word ‘shrill’?” Trump said to a crowd of a few hundred at a convention centre in North Charleston, South Carolina, on Wednesday afternoon. “She can be kind of sha-riiiiill.”

Trump is often criticised for the way he describes women, and Clinton was not the only woman he went after. He said Caroline Kennedy is too nice to be the ambassador to Japan. He described, at length, a “vicious, vicious woman” in her 80s who once sued him during a dispute over an apartment. And he yet again called the career of former technology executive Carly Fiorina, another Republican running for president, “a disaster”.

“They say: ‘You can’t say that because it’s sexist’,” Trump said. “I say: ‘What’s sexist about it?’ I respect women more than I respect men ... I have great respect, admiration, and I cherish women ... I love women!”

Several people in the audience said those sorts of brash, politically incorrect comments are the No 1 reason they love Trump - and why they would vote for him in the presidential primary here next February.

Was it payback? Clinton appears with host Jimmy Fallon (L) as Donald Trump during the "Trump calls Hillary" skit on the Tonight Show. Photo: Reuters

“He speaks his mind. He tells the truth,” said Stephanie Grant, a mother of three wearing a “ReTRUMPlican” t-shirt who drove about two and a half hours from Hartsville to see Trump. “As much as I hate to admit it, I’m 42 and I’ve never voted before. But I’m voting for him. I never felt like anyone was telling the truth before now.”

Trump’s comments came during a meandering 40-minute speech that featured many of his regular talking points - such as China stealing jobs from the US and the media treating him unfairly - along with tangents on sweating, golf, his plane, Michael Jordan, the low quality of foreign-made furniture and his various business ventures. He spent very little time discussing what some expected would be the centerpiece of his speech: expanding opportunities for minority business owners.

Trump’s team billed the event as an address to the South Carolina African-American Chamber of Commerce, but his appearance actually came during the Greater Charleston Business Alliance’s annual meeting.  

Trump said he likes “African American negotiators”, and he said it should be easier for black entrepreneurs, along with all entrepreneurs, to secure business loans. He also claimed that a recent, unidentified poll found that 25 per cent of African-Americans surveyed would vote for him in the general election.

Caroline Kennedy: 'Too nice' to be US ambassador to Japan, according to Trump. Photo: AP

“I have a lot of friends, African Americans in New York, who said: ‘You’re going to get most of them’,” Trump said. “I was actually disappointed with the 25 per cent.”

John Gethers of Columbia, who secures financing for minority-owned businesses, said he attended the speech to hear Trump’s ideas on bonding issues, access to capital and contracting opportunities.

“I was kind of confused - I don’t know what I just sat through,” said Gethers, 31, who is black. “I don’t know if any presidential candidate is going to be specific, but I just thought I was going to hear a little bit more.”

Trump instead devoted large chunks of his speech criticising various media outlets for not treating him fairly.

Earlier in the day, Trump had tweeted that “for the foreseeable future” he would no longer do interviews with Fox News. Trump has become increasingly critical of Fox and its major personalities in recent days. The announcement came about 15 minutes after The O’Reilly Factor show cancelled an interview with Trump scheduled for Thursday, according to a Fox spokesperson.

Becky Causey, a 71-year-old retiree who attended the speech, said she closely reads Trump’s tweets and watches television at least 15 hours per day to catch everything Trump-related.  

“I don’t like CNN because they don’t like Trump,” said Causey, a retired nurse . “Now it looks like Fox News is against him. And I’m putting Bill O’Reilly on hold.”

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