At an event aimed at bridging the partisan divide, skeptical questioners pressed Donald Trump over his polarizing tone and positions.
The Republican presidential candidate’s appearance at the event — the “Problem Solver Convention” hosted by the bipartisan group No Labels — was a diversion from the usual rah-rah rallies filled with die-hard fans the candidate is usually seen at. Trump spoke dismissively to a handful of young critics, correcting or questioning their facts and cutting off questions.
When attendee Micaela Connery asked the Republican presidential candidate whether his divisive tone hurt efforts for the kind of bipartisan cooperation and progress the host group promotes, Trump said he “went to Ivy League schools, I know what’s divisive I know what’s not,” adding that he’d be less divisive later in the campaign.
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Another young woman pressed Trump on women’s issues, suggesting that he wasn’t a “friend of women” and asking him to “prove me wrong.”
“If you become president, will a woman make the same as a man and do I get to choose what I do with my body?” she said, her hands defiantly thrown in the air.
“You’re going to make the same if you do as good a job,” Trump said. “I happen to be pro-life, OK? I’m pro-life.”
He moved on to another question.
When a young man pushed back against Trump’s frequent assertion that the U.S. defends the South Korean border for free, Trump interjected, asking if the man – who appeared to be of Asian heritage – was from South Korea.
“I’m not, I was born in Texas, raised in Colorado,” the man said. “No matter where I’m from, I like to get my facts straight and that’s not true – South Korea paid $861 million,” he began before being cut off again.
“Which is peanuts compared to what it’s costing us,” Trump fired back, before stressing his view at length that the U.S. is being ripped off by other nations at length.








