News World Donald Trump heats up Virginia crowd with new Hillary Clinton nicknames

Donald Trump heats up Virginia crowd with new Hillary Clinton nicknames

Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump debuted new nicknames for his rival Hillary Clinton on Monday calling her ‘Hillary Rotten Clinton’ and 'Crooked Hillary'.

Donald Trump Donald Trump

Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump debuted new nicknames for his rival Hillary Clinton on Monday calling her ‘Hillary Rotten Clinton’ and 'Crooked Hillary'.

“Why did Hillary get rid of her middle name? Huh? Hillary? No, but why did she get rid of it? Hillary Rotten Clinton, Rotten Clinton. Hillary Rotten Clinton, right? Maybe that’s why, it’s too close. No, no, it’s too close, it’s too close,” Trump said during a campaign rally in Roanoke, Virginia alongside his running mate Mike Pence.

The event was held in the home state of Clinton's new running mate, Sen. Tim Kaine, whom Trump derided as a "weird little dude" and a political "hack."

Trump argued that Clinton made a mistake when she chose Kaine, describing the well-liked former governor and senator as the opposite of the sort of fiery liberal that supporters of Clinton's former rival Bernie Sanders may have been drawn to.

Many of Sanders' supporters at the Democratic National Convention remain deeply committed to their candidate, holding demonstrations in Philadelphia and booing mentions of Clinton on the convention floor.

Speaking Monday night at a rally in North Carolina during a rally that capped off his first day on the road since becoming his party's nominee, Trump repeatedly pointed to the commotion in Philadelphia.

"What a mess they have going," said Trump. "Crazy Bernie's going crazy right now."

During the Virginia rally, the billionaire businessman unleashed a barrage of attacks against Clinton in light of the latest scandal to overshadow her run for office. He accused Clinton of disloyalty for not protecting outgoing Democratic National Committee Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz following the release of hacked emails that suggest some DNC staffers favored Clinton over Sanders.

Trump claims Wasserman Schultz "worked very hard to rig the system" in Clinton's favor, and Clinton responded by throwing her "under the bus."

He also suggested at one point that China may have been involved in the DNC hack, despite no evidence to suggest the country's involvement.

"Little did she know that China, Russia — one of our many, many friends — came in and hacked the hell out of us," Trump said sarcastically, framing the words "friends" in air quotes.

After Democratic Party officials learned their systems were attacked in late April, they sought the help of the cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike Inc., which then discovered traces of at least two sophisticated hacking groups on the Democrats' network — both of which have ties to the Russian government.

The FBI said Monday it is investigating how the hack occurred.

In North Carolina, Trump dismissed suggestions that the Russians may be trying to influence the election in his favor because of his relatively friendly approach to the country's president, Vladimir Putin. He called the idea "one of the weirdest conspiracies."

Still, he asked: "Wouldn't it be nice if we actually did get along with Russia?"

With AP Inputs

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