If you think Donald Trump has anything to apologize for this Sunday, then you’re probably a deviant.
So said the billionaire real-estate mogul turned presidential candidate on multiple Sunday morning shows, as the GOP presidential candidate refused to apologize for his criticisms of Fox News host Megyn Kelly, which many in his own party had deemed misogynistic.
“I have so much respect for women and I will help women in terms of the health issues,” Trump told NBC’s Chuck Todd on “Meet the Press.”
“I was one of the first people to put women in charge of big construction jobs,” he added.
Related: ‘The beginning of the end’: Inside Trump’s RedState meltdown
During the first Republican presidential primary debate Thursday night, Kelly, who was moderating, confronted Trump with his history of referring to various women as “fat pigs, dogs, slobs and disgusting animals,” then asked if that reflected “the temperament of a man we should elect as president?”
Trump called Kelly’s question “ridiculous” and “off-base,” in an interview with CNN the following day.
“You could see there was blood coming out of her eyes,” Trump told CNN host Don Lemon on Friday night. “Blood coming out of her wherever.”
To many, “blood coming out of her wherever,” sounded like a dog-whistle reference to menstruation. That interpretation of the comment became so widespread, the conservative group RedState dis-invited Trump to it’s annual gathering. It also may have cost Trump one of his top aides – Trump announced the firing of longtime adviser Roger Stone on Saturday, but Stone told msnbc that he had resigned from the campaign out of frustration over Trump’s feud with Kelly.
Trump insisted that by “wherever,” he was referring to Kelly’s “ears or nose.”
“Only a deviant would make that jump,” Trump told Todd. “I went to the Wharton School of Finance, the toughest place to get into. I was a great student. I don’t talk that way.”
Many of Trump’s supporters agree, including the female co-chair of Trump’s Iowa campaign Tana Goertz, who told NBC News, “I am a woman. I experience that every month. And it never crossed my mind. So I think people are just looking at pinpointing him as sexist and all these other things.”
On “Meet the Press,” Todd noted that, even if Trump hadn’t intended to invoke menstruation, he still has a history of disparaging the physical appearance of his female critics.
“I was attacked by the people you talk about,” Trump replied. “When I’m attacked, I fight back. When I was attacked viciously by those women, of course, it’s very hard for them to attack me on looks, because I’m so good looking.”
In all his interviews, Trump quickly pivoted from defending his controversial comments, to attacking former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush’s for his women’s health related gaffe.








