Trump hits back at 'disastrous' Obama
Donald Trump has dismissed Barack
Obama's time in the White House as a "disaster" after the US
president said he was not fit to succeed him.
"He's been weak, he's been ineffective,"
Republican candidate Mr Trump said of Mr Obama in a Fox News interview on
Tuesday.
Mr Obama has questioned why Mr Trump's party hasn't
disowned him.
Mr Trump has also turned on two senior figures in his own
party who have publicly criticised him.
In an interview for the Washington Post, he refused to
endorse House Speaker Paul Ryan and Senator John McCain, who are up for
re-election in November.
Republican
donor backs Clinton
Amid the feuding within Republican ranks, prominent party
donor and fundraiser Meg Whitman has publicly endorsed Democrat Hillary
Clinton, saying Donald Trump's "demagoguery" had undermined the
national fabric.
"To vote Republican out of party loyalty alone would
be to endorse a candidacy that I believe has exploited anger, grievance,
xenophobia and racial division," she wrote on Facebook.
"Trump's unsteady hand would endanger our prosperity
and national security. His authoritarian character could threaten much
more."
In other developments:
Hillary Clinton had extended her lead over Mr Trump to
eight percentage points, from six points on Friday
A federal judge who has been a target of Mr Trump's
repeated scorn denied a media request to release videos of the candidate
testifying in a lawsuit about the now-defunct Trump University; Mr Trump's
lawyers had argued the videos would have been used to tarnish his campaign.
French President Francois Hollande joined the chorus of
criticism on Tuesday, saying that Mr Trump made people "feel
nauseous".
He warned that a Trump presidential election victory
could herald a very strong turn to the right around the world.
'Look
at Ukraine'
Mr Trump said Mr Obama had been "the worst
president, maybe, in the history of our country".
Mr Trump has also been condemned for his comments that
appeared to back the Russian annexation of Crimea.
But he retorted: "I believe I know far more about
foreign policy than he [Mr Obama] knows.
"Look at Ukraine. He talks about Ukraine [and] how
tough he is with Russia. In the meantime they took over Crimea."
Mr Obama and Mrs Clinton, his one-time secretary of
state, had "destabilised the Middle East" while putting the
"country at risk" with Mrs Clinton's use of a private email server, he
said.
Mr Trump is under fire for attacking the parents of a
dead US Muslim soldier after they criticised him at the Democratic convention
last week.
At the convention, Khizr Khan, whose son died while
serving in Iraq, criticised Mr Trump's plan to temporarily ban Muslims from
entering the US.
Mr Trump responded by attacking the couple - who are
called in the US a "Gold Star" family, the term for families that
have lost a close relative in war. Democratic and Republican leaders as well as
veterans' groups quickly condemned him.
"The Republican nominee is unfit to serve as
president and he keeps on proving it," Mr Obama said on Tuesday.
"The notion that he would attack a Gold Star family
that made such extraordinary sacrifices... means that he is woefully unprepared
to do this job."
New York Representative Richard Hanna became the first
Republican member of Congress to publicly say he would vote for Mrs Clinton.
Mr Hanna said Mr Trump's comments about the Khan family
had been the deciding factor.
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