Simi Valley, California – The political jousting began early in the second Republican presidential debate, with front-runner Donald Trump getting into fights with nearly everyone else onstage. But while his usual rivals mostly failed to throw him off his game, a new debate participant seemed to present his toughest challenge yet.
In one of several skirmishes, businesswoman Carly Fiorina – who did not qualify for the first debate — responded to recent remarks by Trump deriding her physical appearance.
“I think women all over this country heard very clearly what Mr. Trump said,” Fiorina said.
The audience burst into massive applause in response, easily the loudest of the night. Trump, who seemed caught off guard by the explosive reaction to the field’s only female candidate, said that Fiorina “has a beautiful face” and is a “beautiful woman.”
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Fiorina and Trump later clashed over their business records, with Trump saying her record as CEO of Hewlett-Packard, which was marred by layoffs and internal conflict, was a “disaster.” Fiorina shot back that Trump had filed for bankruptcy repeatedly after running up “mountains of debt.”
The debate, hosted by CNN, was held at the Ronald Reagan Library, where the 40th president is buried. The 11 candidates, spread less than two feet apart across the stage, met in front of Reagan’s presidential jet.
Fiorina seemed at home on the main stage, making the most of her biggest moment yet. As the evening wore on, Trump’s energy seemed to wane as she took command and other contenders, especially Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, faded into the background for long stretches. The soft-spoken Dr. Ben Carson, who shot to second place in the polls after his debate performance in August, also struggled to get a word in as other candidates interrupted the proceedings to get in their talking points.
Fiorina was hardly the only candidate to tangle with Trump. Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, who has stepped up his attacks on Trump on the trail, clashed often with the billionaire. Bush accused Trump of acting as a “special interest” when he was governor by trying to lobby Bush to legalize casino gambling, which he opposed (“I promise: If I wanted it I would have gotten it,” Trump said). At one point, he demanded Trump apologize to his wife, Columba Bush, for suggesting that her Mexican heritage made Bush unwilling to crack down on illegal immigration.
“I hear your wife is a lovely woman,” Trump said, but he didn’t comply with the request.
Trump later tied Bush to his brother, President George W. Bush, who he said should never have invaded Iraq and managed the economy so badly that “Abraham Lincoln” couldn’t defeat Barack Obama in 2008. Bush said his brother “kept us safe,” prompting a round of applause from the audience. Walker also defended the former president from Trump’s attack, arguing Obama bore responsibility instead for conflict in the Middle East.
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Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), a longtime Iraq War critic, took Trump’s side in that debate. But he pointed to Trump’s tendency to mock people’s appearance as evidence of a “junior high school” temperament unsuited to foreign policy and Trump proved more than happy to play the schoolyard bully.
“I never attacked him on his look — and believe me there’s plenty of subject matter there,” Trump said.
“We don’t need an “’Apprentice’ in the White House, we have one right now,” Walker declared early in the debate, apparently unfamiliar with Trump’s reality TV show – the apprentices were the contestants.
The candidates soon dove into more substantive issues, however, getting into a spirited debate over whether to immediately renounce the White House’s nuclear agreement with Iran if they take office. Sen. Ted Cruz promised to “rip to shreds” the agreement, a position echoed by Walker. Ohio Gov. John Kasich argued that such a move would alienate the allies who negotiated it with the United States and that he would instead enforce the agreement. Bush said, “it’s not a strategy to tear up an agreement,” while Paul called the “rip to shreds” idea “absurd.”








