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Trump lashes out at media, Republicans

Donald Trump has taken aim at reporters and those Republicans who distanced themselves from him in a combative post-election news conference.

Donald Trump
Donald Trump says the US government will suffer if his opponents try to investigate him. (AAP)

The day after his party lost its lock on the Congress, US President Donald Trump walked into a White House press conference with combative words, blaming Republicans for losing their seats and lashing out at reporters who challenged him.

Republicans lost control of the House of Representatives to Democrats, but Trump shrugged that off.

During a raucous news conference that lasted close to 90 minutes, he cast Tuesday's congressional election results as "very close to complete victory" for Republicans and said he could negotiate easier on some issues with Democrats, anyway.

Some reporters pushed him on whether his campaign rhetoric on migrants from central America was divisive - and on developments in a federal investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election..

Trump aggressively pushed back.

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"CNN should be ashamed of itself, having you working for them," Trump told CNN correspondent Jim Acosta.

"You are a rude, terrible person."

A White House staffer grabbed and pulled the microphone while Acosta held it in his hands.

To PBS NewsHour's Yamiche Alcindor, who asked him about white nationalists being emboldened by Trump labelling himself a "nationalist", Trump said he was insulted.

"That's such a racist question," Trump said.

Trump took the rare step of mocking Republican candidates who kept their distance from him during the campaign because of concerns that his divisive messages on immigration would turn off voters.

"Carlos Curbelo, Mike Coffman - too bad, Mike," he said, referring to losing Republican congressmen in Florida and Colorado contests.

Trump scorned Utah's Mia Love and Virginia's Barbara Comstock.

"Mia Love gave me no love," he said.

"And Barbara Comstock was another one. I mean, I think she could have won that race, but she didn't want to have any embrace."

Trump also warned Democrats against using their new political power to investigate him.

Some House Democrats have threatened to use the subpoena power they will gain in January to investigate Trump and his administration's actions.

The president warned he will respond in kind and government will suffer, plus, he said, Democrats have "nothing, zero" on him.


2 min read

Published

Source: AAP



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