US President Donald Trump on Tuesday mounted an aggressive defense of his response to a deadly far-right march in Virginia, using a rally speech to condemn “dishonest” media coverage of his widely criticized remarks.
Trump faced bipartisan outrage after blaming “many sides” for violence at the rally in Charlottesville, in which one anti-fascist protester was killed.
Re-reading his statements that followed the clashes, he railed at reporters at the rally in Phoenix, Arizona, for misrepresenting his remarks — but omitted the equivocation that had sparked the backlash in the first place.
Photo: AFP
“The very dishonest media ... and I mean truly dishonest people in the media and the fake media, they make up stories. They have no sources in many cases. They say ‘a source says’ — there is no such thing,” he said.
“But they don’t report the facts. Just like they don’t want to report that I spoke out forcefully against hatred, bigotry and violence, and strongly condemned the neo-Nazis, the white supremacists and the KKK,” he said.
Trump dedicated about half an hour of his 78-minute speech to attacking the “sick people” in the news media, before turning his fire on his own side.
The speech was cheered raucously by supporters inside the conference center, though thousands of anti-Trump protesters, who had lined up under a blistering sun in Phoenix hours before his arrival, later clashed with police outside the venue.
Police deployed tear gas to disperse them, according to reporters at the scene.
Jonathan Howard, a spokesman for the city’s police force, said that five arrests had been made and that protesters had thrown rocks, bottles and tear gas at police.
Speculation had been building that Trump would use the rally to formally endorse a challenger to Arizona Senator Jeff Flake in a shot across the bow of skeptical Republicans.
He mocked Flake and fellow Arizona Republican Senator John McCain, implying that McCain had sabotaged Republican healthcare reforms, but elaborately avoided mentioning either by name.
Veering off script, Trump shied away from issuing a pardon for Joe Arpaio — a former sheriff in Arizona who was convicted of wilfully violating a court order to stop targeting Hispanics in immigration roundups.
However, he gave strong hints that he was preparing a future pardon, saying: “I think he’s going to be just fine, okay? I won’t do it tonight because I don’t want to cause any controversy.”
Trump voiced optimism over improvements in relations with North Korea following an escalation in aggressive rhetoric on both sides over Pyongyang’s nuclear program.
“I respect the fact that he is starting to respect us. And maybe — probably not, but maybe — something positive can come about,” Trump said of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, though the president repeated his opinion that he had not gone far enough in his condemnation of Kim.
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