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Paul Ryan Calls Donald Trump’s Attack on Judge ‘Racist,’ but Backs Him Still Paul Ryan Calls Donald Trump’s Attack on Judge ‘Racist,’ but Still Backs Him
(about 9 hours later)
WASHINGTON — Speaker Paul D. Ryan on Tuesday called Donald J. Trump’s criticism of a federal judge of Hispanic heritage “the textbook definition of a racist comment” and said he “regrets” the remark. But Mr. Ryan also reiterated his support for Mr. Trump, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee. WASHINGTON — Speaker Paul D. Ryan, the nation’s highest-ranking Republican, on Tuesday called Donald J. Trump’s remarks about a Latino judge “racist,” an extraordinary indictment that generated a fresh wave of criticism and panic from other Republicans. By the end of the day, Mr. Trump was forced into a rare moment of damage control and said that his words had been “misconstrued.”
“I disavow these comments I regret those comments that he made,” Mr. Ryan said after announcing a new Republican anti-poverty initiative in Anacostia, an overwhelmingly black neighborhood in Washington. Mr. Trump, who said last week that a Mexican-American judge in a case involving Trump University was biased against him because of his heritage, issued a statement Tuesday saying, “I do not feel that one’s heritage makes them incapable of being impartial.” He added that he was simply questioning whether he was receiving a fair trial, but he did not apologize for his remarks, something many Republicans had urged him to do.
“Claiming a person can’t do their job because of their race is sort of like the textbook definition of a racist comment,” Mr. Ryan continued. “I think that should be absolutely disavowed. It’s absolutely unacceptable. But do I believe that Hillary Clinton is the answer? No, I do not.” On Capitol Hill, Republicans faced an increasingly difficult task giving Mr. Trump their support while still keeping their distance from his inflammatory language. While many Republicans continued to affirm their support for Mr. Trump, others appeared ready to abandon him, throwing the once stolid party further into disarray.
He said, “I believe that we have more common ground on the policy issues of the day and we have more likelihood of getting our policies enacted with him than with her.” “I cannot and will not support my party’s nominee for president,” said Senator Mark S. Kirk, Republican of Illinois, becoming the first Republican senator running for re-election to break with Mr. Trump. “After much consideration, I have concluded that Donald Trump has not demonstrated the temperament necessary to assume the greatest office in the world” or to control the nation’s nuclear arsenal.
Mr. Trump made the comments about Judge Gonzalo P. Curiel of Federal District Court, who is overseeing a suit against the now-shuttered Trump University. Mr. Kirk is perhaps the most vulnerable incumbent Republican, in a state where Mr. Trump is likely to be a drag on the ticket. Mr. Kirk, who still speaks with difficulty from a stroke in 2012, also noted that Mr. Trump has mocked a disabled reporter.
Pressed on Mr. Trump’s doubling down on his position that he is skeptical of the objectivity of nonwhite judges, Mr. Ryan said, “If you say something that is wrong, the mature and responsible thing is to acknowledge that it’s wrong.” Others were close to following Mr. Kirk. “If Donald remains Donald, I will not vote for him,” declared Senator Jeff Flake, Republican of Arizona, who echoed Mr. Ryan’s denunciation of Mr. Trump’s comments.
As the party’s highest-ranking elected official, Mr. Ryan faces perhaps the most difficult challenge as tries to balance support for his party’s nominee with the need to advance Republicans’ broader fortunes in the fall. There is rising concern in the party that Mr. Trump’s insults are offending broad swaths of the electorate in ways that could imperil Republicans in down-ballot races. In a victory speech in Westchester County on Tuesday night, Mr. Trump struck a measured tone, saying he understood the responsibility of carrying the mantle of the Republican Party. “I will never, ever let you down,” he said.
Senator Richard Durbin of Illinois, the No. 2 Democrat, expressed disbelief that Republicans would condemn Mr. Trump’s remarks as racist and yet continue to support him. “You can run but you can’t hide,” Mr. Durbin said, adding, “The Grand Old Party is going to be held accountable in November.” But Mr. Trump’s more incendiary remarks in other arenas have left many congressional Republicans facing a painful dilemma. Those who are on the ballot defending the party’s majorities this year need Mr. Trump’s voters to win, and risk angering them with any full disavowal of the nominee. But to continue to embrace him as he openly injects race into the campaign poses its own dangers.
Across the Capitol on Tuesday, several Republicans struggled to justify their continuing support of his candidacy, and in many cases fell back on the argument that there was simply no other choice. Even Republicans who have praised his candidacy warned on Tuesday that the party may have to separate itself from its standard-bearer.
“Look, he stepped in it,” Senator Bob Corker, Republican of Tennessee and chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee told reporters. “And you know this happens sometimes in campaigns.” Senator Bob Corker, a Tennessee Republican who has met privately with Mr. Trump and been mentioned as a vice-presidential choice, said “there could be” a line that the presumptive nominee crosses that would make him withdraw his support.
Mr. Corker said he hoped Mr. Trump would recognize his mistake and shift course. “This is a crucial two- or three-week period,” Mr. Corker said. “If at the end of June, moving into a convention and still not having pivoted toward being more of a general election candidate would prove to be very problematic.”
“I am a Republican, but what I care more about is our nation, and where we’re going as a nation,” he said. “And so again, I hope this isn’t the pattern that is going to occur between now and November. But what I see is, O.K., you have got a binary choice.” In private, the senators redirected their anger toward Senator Jeff Sessions, the Alabama Republican who is Mr. Trump’s most outspoken supporter in the Senate. Senator Kelly Ayotte, a New Hampshire Republican who is also in a difficult re-election fight, used a closed-door luncheon to complain that Mr. Trump’s comments were obscuring the party’s economic message and urged Mr. Sessions to tell Mr. Trump to drop his jeremiad against the judge, according to two senators present who requested anonymity to reveal private conversations.
Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, said, “My advice to our nominee would be to start talking about the issues the American people care about.” Many Republicans hewed to a carefully scripted text in which the prospect of Hillary Clinton in the White House is presented as a larger threat than the risk their party may be taking with Mr. Trump.
Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina, who is not supporting Mr. Trump, said many Republicans were feeling the blowback from the presumptive nominee’s statements. “He’s created a problem for himself and everybody else, and if he could show some ability to adjust that would probably solidify his support and help him down the road,” Mr. Graham said. “What we have here is a country in crisis,” said Senator David Perdue, Republican of Georgia, adding that Mrs. Clinton was not the person to govern in troubled times. But even that defense showed it cracks.
“What he is doing regarding this judge, as I said, is un-American, it’s outrageous, I think,” Mr. Graham said. “The judge’s family, mom and dad were born in Mexico. He is the epitome of the American dream.” Judge Curiel was born in Indiana. Asked which of Mr. Trump’s policy statements he preferred over Mrs. Clinton’s, Senator Dan Coats, Republican of Indiana, paused for 11 seconds before saying, “I don’t know that I want to deal with that.”
“As far as I can tell, the judge has done nothing inappropriate legally,” Mr. Graham added. “There is a reason the lawyers haven’t asked the judge to step down because his parents were born in Mexico because if you did that, not only would you lose the motion, you could be sanctioned by the court and disbarred.” Beyond Washington, other Republicans were also not satisfied with Mr. Trump’s response. “Donald Trump should retract his comments, not defend them. There is no place for racism in the G.O.P., or this country,” former Gov. Jeb Bush of Florida said on Twitter.
Mr. Ryan on Tuesday struggled but mostly failed to distinguish between Mr. Trump’s remarks and the man himself, saying, “I don’t know what’s in his heart.” For Mr. Ryan, the day began with an extraordinary news conference in Anacostia, a predominantly African-American neighborhood in Washington, where he announced the House Republican plan for addressing poverty.
He said: “I do absolutely disavow those comments. I think they are wrong. I don’t think they are right-headed. And the thinking behind it is something I don’t personally relate to. But at the end of the day this is about ideas. This is about moving our agenda forward.” But Mr. Ryan’s news conference was dominated by questions about Mr. Trump, whom he endorsed last week after earlier expressing doubts about his candidacy. Going further than most of his Republican colleagues, he labeled “the textbook definition of a racist comment” Mr. Trump’s suggestion in a CNN interview that Judge Gonzalo P. Curiel of Federal District Court could not be impartial because he was “Mexican.”
He added, “I believe that we are far better off advancing these policies, getting them into law, with his candidacy than we clearly are with Hillary Clinton.” For the next several hours, Republican senators were asked if they would rescind their support for Mr. Trump. Ms. Ayotte said Mr. Trump’s comments “were wrong and offensive,” adding, “He should retract those comments.”
Asked how he could support Mr. Trump after calling the remarks racist, Mr. Ryan said: “I don’t know what’s in his heart but I think that comment itself is defined that way. So I’m not going to defend these kinds of comments because they are indefensible.” Among others in a perilous trap are Senators Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, whose new book boasts of his commitment to civil rights; Tim Scott, the Senate’s only African-American Republican; and Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz, sons of Cuban immigrants. Their choice now appears one between their biographies and their principles.
For the moment, Republicans are more focused on limiting the damage they incur as a result of Mr. Trump’s candidacy than they are getting him elected.
Mr. Scott, who has called Mr. Trump’s comments “racially toxic,” portrayed his own party’s nominee as a temporary affliction on conservatism.
“For the next several months, he will have the loudest voice, but the fact of the matter is there will be other voices speaking as well,” he said, not even suggesting Mr. Trump could have the party’s loudest voice for four years.
On Tuesday, Mr. McConnell deflected numerous questions about Mr. Trump before saying, “ It’s time to quit attacking various people that you competed with or various minority groups in the country and get on message.”
Even Republicans who shied from talk of abandoning the nominee shifted their tone. Moving from alarmed to angry, the party’s leaders sent Mr. Trump an unmistakable message: He is hurting the party and must stop.
Senator Richard Burr, a North Carolina Republican who has also embraced Mr. Trump, acknowledged that the party may have to disavow Mr. Trump, employing the well-worn maxim from former Justice Potter Stewart about how one can detect pornography.
“This is one of those things you’ll know it when you see it,” said Mr. Burr, adding, hopefully, that he did not think the party “will get there.”
Dashing into a closed-door luncheon of senators, Senator Shelley Moore Capito, Republican of West Virginia, called over her shoulder, “His comments are not helping.” But Ms. Capito also said in an interview that in her economically depressed state, “there is a huge degree of pessimism.”
“People are looking for a message of hope,” she added, underscoring the attractiveness of Mr. Trump’s economic messages for many Republican voters.
Mr. Trump has told his supporters that they should respond by suggesting that reporters who raise questions about his statements are racists, and to carry the message in various forms. One early supporter, Representative Lee Zeldin, Republican of New York, gave the technique a whirl in an interview with CNN on Tuesday. “You can easily argue that the president of the United States is a racist with his policies and his rhetoric.”
The conflagration over Mr. Trump’s remarks has detracted from Mr. Ryan’s desperate efforts to change the conversation on the Hill to focus on policy. But most Republicans agreed they had no real recourse at this point. “There is no easy answer,” Mr. Flake said. “You can write someone in.”
Mr. Trump tried to provide an answer to mitigate the damage. In his statement, he said it was “unfortunate that my comments have been misconstrued as a categorical attack against people of Mexican heritage.”
“I am friends with and employ thousands of people of Mexican and Hispanic descent,” he added. “The American justice system relies on fair and impartial judges. All judges should be held to that standard.
“I do not feel that one’s heritage makes them incapable of being impartial, but, based on the rulings that I have received in the Trump University civil case, I feel justified in questioning whether I am receiving a fair trial.”