Taking a break from the nastiest
campaign in recent memory, Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton came
together Thursday for a New York white-tie soiree intended to bring some
levity just weeks before the November 8 vote.
The candidates shared some laughs but
several of Trump’s jokes turned sour and drew boos at the annual Alfred
E. Smith Memorial Foundation Dinner, a fund-raiser for Catholic
charities that is normally one of the more lighthearted events on the
presidential campaign calendar.
Seated on either side of Cardinal
Timothy Doland of New York at the swank Waldorf-Astoria hotel, the
presidential hopefuls took turns making jests about themselves and each
other, just one night after pummeling each other in a bruising final
presidential debate.
Trump’s attempts at humor mostly lacked
the self-deprecation. And on one of the few instances that he tried to
get laughs at his own expense, the brunt of the joke fell on his wife
Melania.
“Michelle Obama gives a speech and
everyone loves it. It’s fantastic,” he said. “My wife, Melania gives the
exact same speech and people get on her case!”
The reference was to a speech Melania
gave in which she appropriated inspirational words spoken by Michelle
Obama during the 2008 presidential campaign.
“She took a lot of abuse,” Trump said as
his Slovenian ex-model wife stood for the crowd. “Oh, I’m in trouble
when I go home tonight.”
As he hit his monologue’s home stretch
Trump’s jokes grew darker, drawing cascading boos at a dinner intended
to raise money for needy children.
Trump traded punchlines for caustic barbs aimed at Clinton’s hacked emails, calling the Democratic candidate “corrupt.”
“Hillary believes it’s vital to deceive
the people by having one public policy, and a totally different policy
in private,” he said.
“Here she is in public, pretending not to hate Catholics,” he said.
“I don’t know who they’re angry at,
Hillary, you or I,” Trump said in an attempt to brush off the ensuing
flurry of boos from New York’s elite.
Trading sharp barbs
In a nod to tradition, Clinton began her speech with a light dig at herself.
“I took a break from my rigorous nap
schedule to be here,” the Democrat said, alluding to the many times
Trump has mocked her for supposedly lacking stamina.
“You’re lucky,” she told the audience,
“usually I charge a lot for speeches like this,” referring to the
astronomical speaking fees the Clintons charged after leaving office.
She then turned to her opponent:
“Donald, if at any time you don’t like what I’m saying, feel free to
stand up and shout, ‘wrong!’ while I’m talking.”
Clinton later slung a zinger at Trump’s
penchant for judging women harshly based on their appearance,
envisioning how Trump might rank the Statue of Liberty.
“People look at the Statue of Liberty
and they see a proud symbol of our history as a nation of immigrants, a
beacon of hope around the world,” she said.
“Donald looks at the Statue of Liberty and sees a four.”
In another dig, Clinton referenced
Trump’s discomfort with teleprompters: “I’m sure it’s even harder when
you’re translating from the original Russian.”
Partisan politics aside
Some 1,500 well-heeled invitees each paid at least $3,000 to attend the gala, which raised approximately $6 million.
The New York’s archdiocese put out an
optimistic statement earlier Wednesday expressing hope that “partisan
politics will be put aside” during the dinner.
Besides the two presidential candidates,
the guest list included two former New York mayors — Michael Bloomberg
and Rudy Giuliani.
Bloomberg has rallied behind Clinton while Giuliani is one of Trump’s most prominent campaign surrogates.
The dinner is held in the memory of late Democratic governor Al Smith of New York, home state to both presidential candidates.
Trump made a fortune as a real estate
developer here, splashing his name on buildings across the city. The
state elected Clinton to the US Senate twice.
Smith in 1928 became the first Catholic
presidential candidate from one of the two major parties, and is
affectionately remembered for his ability to set aside political
grievances for the good of his constituents.
AFP
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