1. Donald Trump isn't a scumbag.
		
		
	 
Funny how leading Republicans think he is. 
Top Republicans join Obama in condemning Trump’s words 
http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/polit...ondemning-trump’s-words/ar-AAh3yoj?li=BBnb7Kz 
Top Republicans joined with  President Obama and other Democrats Tuesday in sharply condemning Donald  Trump’s reaction to the nightclub massacre in Orlando, decrying his  anti-Muslim rhetoric and his questioning of Obama’s allegiances as  divisive and out of step with America’s values.
Trump  — who just a week ago signaled an intent to snap his campaign into a  more measured tone for the general election — showed no sign of backing  down from his suggestions that Obama was somehow connected to or  sympathetic with terrorists, 
telling the Associated Press that the president “continues to prioritize our enemy” over Americans. 
In  separate appearances, both Obama and his potential successor, likely  Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton, blasted Trump’s proposal to ban  foreign Muslims from the United States as dangerous and contrary to the  nation’s traditions.
A visibly angry Obama 
also dismissed  Trump’s repeated demands for him to use the term “radical Islam” when  speaking about the Orlando shootings and other attacks. “Calling a  threat by a different name does not make it go away,” Obama said. “This  is a political distraction.” 
Clinton described Trump’s response to Orlando as rife with “conspiracy theories” and “pathological self-congratulations.”
The  remarkably bipartisan outcry over Trump’s positions — coming at a  moment of national mourning after the deadliest mass shooting in U.S.  history — set off a new wave of alarm within the GOP over whether the  mogul’s promised pivot to the general election would ever materialize.  The rift also highlighted the enduring tensions between establishment  figures who want to be more inclusive and the bulk of the party, which  backs Trump’s proposed Muslim ban and has rallied around him as the  presumptive nominee. 
Some of  Trump’s most ardent backers defended his response to the Orlando  attack, saying drastic measures were needed to keep the nation safe.   But most Republicans on Capitol Hill tried to distance themselves from  Trump’s comments following the terrorist attack on a gay nightclub in  Orlando that killed at least 49 people. 
Senate Majority Leader Mitch  McConnell (Ky.) refused to respond to questions about Trump at his  weekly news conference. 
Speaker Paul D. Ryan (Wis.) 
denounced  Trump for trying to rally support for his anti-Muslim policies, while  others castigated Trump for the accusations he has lobbed at Obama.
“I  do not think a Muslim ban is in our country’s interest,” Ryan told  reporters. “I do not think it is reflective of our principles, not just  as a party but as a country.” He called for “a security test, not a  religious test” for immigrants. 
In  a speech Monday, Trump had reiterated his calls for such a ban and  expanded its potential reach to include any country with “a history” of  terrorism against the United States and its allies. He blamed the  Orlando attack — which authorities say was carried out by a man born in  America to Afghan parents — in part on a system that “allowed his family  to come here.”
“We have to  screen applicants to know whether they are affiliated with or supporting  radical groups and beliefs,” Trump said in the speech delivered at  Saint Anselm College in Manchester, N.H. “We have to control the amount  of future immigration in this country, and we have to prevent large  pockets of radicalization from forming inside America.”
Senate  Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Bob Corker (R-Tenn.), who has  praised Trump at times for his willingness to shake up politics and  recently met with the mogul, expressed serious unease Tuesday with how  Trump responded to a national tragedy. 
“Traditionally,  it is a time when people rally around our country, and it’s obviously  not what’s occurred, and it’s very disappointing,” Corker said. 
Sen.  Lindsey O. Graham (R-S.C.), a leading national security hawk, said he  had “run out of adjectives” for Trump. “I don’t think he has the  judgment or the temperament, the experience to deal with what we are  facing,” said Graham, who does not currently support the mogul. 
Graham,  like other Republicans, took issue with Trump’s apparent suggestions in  Monday interviews that Obama may identify with the radical Muslim  terrorists. Obama “either is not tough, not smart, or he’s got something  else in mind,” Trump told Fox News. 
Trump  expanded on that line of criticism Tuesday, saying in an emailed  response to questions from the Associated Press: “President Obama claims  to know our enemy, and yet he continues to prioritize our enemy over  our allies and, for that matter, the American people.”
Graham  said that Trump “seems to be suggesting that the president is one of  ‘them.’ 
I find that highly offensive. I find that whole line of  reasoning way off base. My problems with President Obama are his policy  choices.”
Sen. Ron Johnson  (R-Wis.), who faces a challenging reelection bid, also called Trump’s  insinuations about the president “offensive.”
Speaking  after meeting with his National Security Council, Obama dismissed  Trump’s many calls for him to change the way he talks about terrorism. 
“That’s  the key, they tell us. We can’t get ISIL unless we call them ‘radical  Islamists,’ ” Obama said, referring to the Islamic State militant group.  “What exactly would using this label accomplish? What exactly would it  change? Would it make ISIL less committed to trying to kill Americans?  Would it bring in more allies? Is there a military strategy that is  served by this? The answer is:  none of the above.”
At  a campaign event in Pittsburgh, Clinton excoriated Trump and challenged  Republicans to repudiate him. Clinton said Trump — whom she called  “Donald” — failed to demonstrate an ability to deliver a “calm,  collected and dignified response” to the Orlando attack.
“Instead,  yesterday morning, just one day after the massacre, he went on TV and  suggested that President Obama is on the side of the terrorists,”  Clinton said. “Just think about that. Even in a time of divided  politics, this is way beyond anything that should be said by someone  running for president.”
Trump  has also said Obama should “resign” because of his refusal to utter the  words “radical Islamic terrorism.” But one of the mogul’s top backers  on Capitol Hill said Trump doesn’t expect that to happen. 
“What  I think Trump’s saying is: You need to get in the game and start  leading, or get out of here,” said 
Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.). “That’s  just his way of expressing it. And I think people understood that. He  doesn’t expect President Obama to resign, but he’s saying you can’t do  this job effectively if you don’t understand the nature of the threat we  face.”
Sessions said there was no discussion at a 90-minute Senate GOP lunch of Trump specifically; instead it focused on terrorism.
  
Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.), an Air Force major and leading House GOP  voice on national security issues, broke sharply with Trump. 
“I  guess I appreciate Mr. Trump’s fieriness in talking about it, but you  don’t do it by alienating the very people that we need, and those are  moderate Muslims,” he said. “We have to use the folks that frankly are  not radicalized, which is the vast majority of Muslims, to win this  war.”
Nationally, 64 percent  of Republican voters said in a recent Washington Post-ABC News poll that  they approve of Trump’s Muslim ban — as did 45 percent of independents —  while 26 percent of Democrats said they approve. 
Last  week, Trump delivered a subdued speech that celebrated his primary wins  and looked ahead to a matchup with Clinton. His campaign told allies  that Trump was strategizing for a new phase of the campaign. 
But  by this week — after a series of fiery rallies in which he called out  enemies by name and then his response to Orlando — many 
Republicans were  left scratching their heads. 
Lanhee  Chen, a respected GOP foreign policy expert who served as policy  director on Mitt Romney’s 2012 campaign, called Trump’s Monday speech a  “huge wasted opportunity.”
“What  he has said overall about foreign policy is very troubling,” said Chen,  who said he has many issues with the mogul but does not consider  himself part of the “Never Trump” wing of the GOP. 
Chen  said Trump needs to “start defining what his presidency would look  like” in “more than just a few sound bites.” But he added: “I’m not  holding my breath.”