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President
Donald Trump defended himself Sunday night after several days of
controversy over his remarks about African countries, telling reporters,
"I am not a racist."
In
remarks to reporters at a dinner photo opportunity with House Majority
Leader Kevin McCarthy in West Palm Beach, Florida, Trump said when asked
if he is a racist, "No, I'm not a racist. I am the least racist person
you have ever interviewed."
The
President has drawn sharp criticism since he was reported to have
called African countries "shitholes" while discussing immigration with
lawmakers Thursday.
Democrats
have been demanding protections for recipients of the Deferred Action
for Childhood Arrivals program in exchange for border security funding
that could include money for Trump's promised border wall, but those
talks reached an impasse after the President's recent remarks. Congress
is grappling with the issue as they negotiate over a spending bill they
need to pass by Friday to avoid a government shutdown.
Trump
and some of the lawmakers in the closed-door meeting Thursday have
since pushed back on the characterization of his comments, with the
President denying making the derogatory remarks and allied Republican senators taking to the Sunday morning shows to claim Trump never used the vulgar phrase.
Georgia
Sen. David Perdue said Trump "did not use that word" and called the
assertions that he did "a gross misrepresentation." Arkansas Sen. Tom
Cotton also claimed the President's remarks were mischaracterized,
saying, "I didn't hear it, and I was sitting no further away from Donald
Trump than Dick Durbin was."
In a statement Friday, the two said they didn't recall
Trump making the derogatory comments, "but what he did call out was the
imbalance in our current immigration system, which does not protect
American workers and our national interest."
Durbin,
a Democratic senator from Illinois, said, however, that Trump did use
"hate-filled, vile and racist" language in the meeting, according to the
Chicago Tribune. Additionally, Sen. Lindsey Graham told fellow South
Carolina Republican Sen. Tim Scott that the reported comments were
"basically accurate," Scott told the Charleston-based Post and Courier.
On Sunday night, the President addressed the looming government shutdown when asked if it would happen.
"I don't know if there will be a shutdown, there shouldn't be," he said.
The
White House and Democrats in Congress are negotiating an immigration
deal as lawmakers face a Friday deadline to pass a federal spending bill
and avoid a government shutdown.
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