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US election: Trump v Clinton
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‘They’ve been riding this tiger for a long time’: Barack Obama takes aim at Republicans for supporting Donald Trump

Obama entered the final 100 days of his presidency and he’s increasingly devoting his time to trying to push Clinton over the finish line in the presidential race

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US President Barack Obama. Photo: AFP
Associated Press

President Barack Obama insisted on Thursday that Republicans who are disavowing Donald Trump deserve no credit for their sudden change of heart after having “stood by silently” for so long. He accused Republicans of filling a “swamp of crazy” by allowing unfounded and hate-filled rhetoric to go unchallenged within the party for years.

Campaigning for Democrats in Ohio, Obama said most Republicans aren’t like Trump and “know better,” but hadn’t renounced the kind of rhetoric Trump embraces out of deference to the Republican base. The president said that it was Republican complacency that led the party to nominate a candidate who he said brags and jokes about sexually assaulting women.

They’ve been riding this tiger for a long time. They’ve been feeding their base all kinds of crazy for years
US President Barack Obama

“You can’t wait until that finally happens and then say, ‘That’s too much, that’s enough,’ and then say somehow you are showing some type of leadership and deserve to be elected to the United States Senate,” Obama said. “In fact, I’m more forgiving of the people who actually believe it than the people who know better and stood silently by out of political expediency.”

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Obama’s attempted takedown of Republicans seeking distance from Trump was the clearest signal to date of the strategy Democrats plan to deploy in congressional races in the final weeks of the campaign.

Across the country, dozens of Republicans up for re-election have called for Trump to step down as nominee or have renounced their support, hoping to spare themselves the fallout of Trump’s sexually aggressive comments about women. They include prominent senators like Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire and John McCain of Arizona – both face tough re-election challenges.

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But Democrats are working to tie those Republicans to Trump nonetheless, in large part by arguing their last-minute denunciations are too little, too late.

Obama said “all that bile, all that exaggeration” from Republicans had bubbled up over the years and that Trump, just like one of his skyscrapers, had “just slapped his name on it and took credit for it”.

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