Donald
Trump has taunted Hillary Clinton over her 'poor' NBC town hall
performance on Wednesday after her campaign complained about host Matt
Lauer.
Trump
said Clinton's own 'dumb' and 'confused' answers over her emails
doomed her night, not the amount of time Lauer spent asking her about
them.
The
Republican also singled out a veteran who suggested she should have
been jailed for how she handled confidential information as another
reason viewers picked him as the winner on the night.
Donald Trump has taunted the Clinton
camp over her 'poor performance' on NBC's Commander in Chief forum last
night after her camp accsued host Matt Lauer of being 'unfair'
The Republican seemed to defend Lauer, saying it was Clinton's own 'very dumb' answers over her emails that doomed her evening
Trump also attacked Clinton for being
'confused' while answering on the email scandal, saying she is 'unfit'
to serve as President
Clinton's
aides had lashed out at Lauer following the show for failing to
challenge Trump after he claimed to have 'totally' opposed the Iraq war,
despite Clinton earlier pointing out that he had supported it in 2002.
Democrats
felt it was unfair to let that comment slide, while grilling Clinton
for almost seven minutes out of a 30 minute segment on her emails.
In
a series of tweets on Thursday afternoon, Trump wrote: 'Hillary just
gave a disastrous news conference on the tarmac to make up for poor
performance last night. She's being decimated by the media!
'Hillary
Clinton answered email questions differently last night than she has in
the past. She is totally confused. Unfit to serve as President.
'It
wasn't Matt Lauer that hurt Hillary last night. It was her very dumb
answer about emails & the veteran who said she should be in jail.'
Lauer
was criticized from both sides of the aisle for his performance on
NBC's Commander in Chief forum, who both felt he wasn't tough enough on
the candidates.
As recently as Wednesday early evening, Trump was publicly questioning whether Lauer would be 'fair' to him.
Although
both camps reportedly agreed to Lauer as the moderator for the debate,
the Trump camp was concerned about one of Lauer's Clinton associations.
He
is listed as a 'notable past member' of the Clinton Global Initiative,
although the Clinton Foundation says journalist members such as Lauer
weren't asked to make the $20,000 membership contribution.
THIS COULD WORK OUT FOR BOTH OF US: The Clinton campaign is now raising money off Matt Lauer's failure to 'fact-check' Trump
Trump responded Thursday to the
Clinton camp's attach on his record on the issue, saying he opposed the
Iraq war 'from the beginning'
And
it is usually Trump who rails against the 'dishonest' media, as he did
Thursday when he insisted he was against the Iraq war from the
'beginning'.
Trump
spent several minutes during what was billed as an education speech
running through his 2003 and 2004 Iraq war statements. 'The media is so
terribly dishonest, so I had to do this,' Trump said.
'I was opposed to the war from the beginning,' he said.
Lauer has been labeled a 'morning show lightweight' by furious
political pundits after he failed to grill Donald Trump on his claim he
never supported the Iraq War during a Commander in Chief Forum on
Wednesday night - but relentlessly questioned Hillary over her private
email scandal.
The
NBC Today show host was accused of going too easy on Trump when the
Republican candidate repeated his claim to have always 'totally opposed
the Iraq war', when in fact he supported an invasion during a 2002
Howard Stern interview.
Instead
of stopping Trump in his tracks during the session at the Intrepid Sea,
Air & Space Museum in Manhattan, Lauer accepted his answer and
immediately moved onto the next question - even though Clinton had told
him during her interview beforehand that Trump had backed the war.
Lauer
questioned Clinton for almost seven minutes of a 30 minute segment
over her emails, many times talking over before demanding she only
briefly touch on other important topics such as ISIS.
'Lauer
interrupted Clinton's answers repeatedly to move on. Not once for
Trump,' wrote respected Capitol Hill watcher Norman Ornstein on Twitter,
adding: 'Tough to be a woman running for president.'
Indeed,
the problem for many was that while Lauer seemed to aggressively
question Clinton during the first segment of the forum, his questions to
Trump were softer, weaker and open-ended, allowing Trump to ignore them
or power through unscathed.
During her own answer on her support
for the Iraq war, Clinton pointed out that Trump has not acknowledged
the fact he once supported it during a 2002 interview, a fact that Lauer
did not pick up later in the interview
NBC News later republished a
fact-checking article on Trump's claim, pointing out that he supported
the war in a 2002 interview with Howard Stern before changing his
position
Lauer's
insistence on pressing and interrupting Clinton on her email debacle
while breezing through Trump's answers led to some accusing him of
trying to prove his journalistic chops.
Democrats
accused Lauer of 'wasting time' on a topic that has been discussed
throughout the election, and then attempting to hurry Clinton along on
later topics, insisting there was not enough time.
Matthew Gertz wrote on Twitter: 'Maybe if Matt Lauer hadn't spent 13 minutes on emails there'd be more time for ISIS.'
Commentator
Guy Cecil added: 'I take no issue with asking Hillary tough questions,
but with all of the global challenges, this is a waste of time.'
Tommy
Vietor, a former aide to President Obama, noted: 'How in the hell does
Lauer not factcheck Trump lying about Iraq? This is embarrassingly bad.'
'Seriously
— everyone, and I mean everyone, knew this would happen. And Matt Lauer
didn't have a followup planned?' wrote political columnist Paul
Krugman.
Glenn
Kessler, the chief fact checker at The Washington Post, posted a link
to NBC's check of Trump's claim and wrote: 'Matt Lauer should have been
prepared to do this.'
Matthew Yglesias wrote on Twitter: 'So Matt Lauer's plan is just to let Trump lie about his past statements on Iraq?'
Journalist Jonathan Chait observed: 'Trump lies about opposing Iraq war. Lauer lets it go. No follow up. Unreal.'
In an article for New York Magazine he wrote: 'Lauer's performance was not merely a failure, it was horrifying and shocking.'
Democrats felt Lauer spent too long
questioning Clinton over her emails while giving Trump a free pass on
his support for the war
Clinton's campaign spokesman was eager
to point out that, had Clinton not mentioned Trump's support in her
earlier answer about Iraq, his comment would have gone unnoticed
Commentators criticized the broadcaster's approach while interviewing both Trump and Clinton
Commentators said the interview focused too much on Clinton's emails rather than addressing global issues
During her answers, Clinton repeated claims that she did not knowingly handle confidential information on her private server.
She
said: 'Classified material has a header, which says 'top secret',
'secret', 'confidential'. Nothing, and I have repeatedly said this, and
this is verified in the report by the Department of Justice. None of the
emails sent or received by me had such a header.'
Clinton
went on to say that whenever she was sent such an email, on a separate
system, she always viewed it in private, even going into tents set up
for such a purpose so the messages couldn't be spied on.
She added: 'So I did exactly what I should have done. And I take it very seriously. Always have, always will.'
She
also said in her defense that 'hundreds of experienced foreign policy
experts, diplomats, defense officials' communicated sensitive
information over an unclassified system 'because it was necessary to
answer questions and to be able publicly to go as far as we could, which
was not acknowledging the program.'
Even
if she had used the State Department's email system, her communications
may still have been compromised, she argued after Lauer asked her about
the possibility of a hack on her secret server.
Trump has repeatedly stated on the
campaign trail that he has always opposed the conflict in Iraq, but in
fact he once told Howard Stern that he supported it, before later
modifying his position
'Matt,
there is no evidence– of course anything is possible. But what is
factual is the State Department system was hacked,' she declared.
'Most
of the government's systems are way behind the curve. We've had hacking
repeatedly, even in the White House. There is no evidence my system was
hacked.'
Lauer's
frequent interruptions of Clinton later on in the interview also drew
allegations of sexism from some, who suggested he allowed Trump far more
freedom to talk.
It
was left to Hillary herself to point out that Trump initially said he
was in favor of the conflict before modifying his position after the war
had started.
She
said: 'My opponent was for the war in Iraq. He says he wasn't. You can
go back and look at the record. He supported it. He told Howard Stern he
supported it.
'So
he supported it before it happened, he supported it as it was
happening, and he is on record as supporting it after it happened.'
In total Clinton spent almost 12
minutes of a 30 minute segment answering questions on her emails, a fact
the Democrats later criticized as biased and said detracted from more
important issues such as ISIS
Asked
about her own support for military intervention in Iraq, Clinton says
she now accepts that it was 'a mistake', adding that voting to give Bush
the authority to take troops into the Middle East was 'my mistake'.
But, she added: 'I have taken my responsibility for my decision. He [Trump] refuses to take responsibility for his support.'
Meanwhile,
during an answer on how he would combat ISIS, Trump said 'I was totally
against the war in Iraq', a statement that Lauer let slide.
On
the campaign trail Trump has repeatedly stated that he opposed the Iraq
war from the very beginning while attacking Clinton and Obama's foreign
policy which he blames for the rise of ISIS.
But
asked whether he supported George Bush's decision to go to war in 2002,
before the conflict started, Trump told Howard Stern: 'Yeah. I guess
so. I wish the first time it was done correctly.'
It was only later the the Republican nominee modified his position, describing the conflict as a 'mess' and a failure.
NBC
did reprise a fact-checking article they previously published on
Trump's claim following the show, but some viewers were not appeased.
Posting
a link to the fact-checking story on Twitter, Isaac Wright, director of
Correct The Record, wrote: 'Too bad they didn't WHEN HE WAS BEING
INTERVIEWED.'
Meanwhile
Hillary's campaign press secretary Brian Fallon wrote: 'At least
Hillary Clinton rebutted him on this lie, or else it would go
unchecked.'
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