Rep. Byron Donalds, a Republican from Florida, chastised twice-failed presidential contender Hillary Clinton for her remarks in which she referred to a large number of Republicans as a “cult” for standing up for former President Donald Trump.
“What is your reaction to learning that you belong to a cult?” Someone asked Donalds.
Donalds retorted, “I stopped caring about what Hillary Clinton had to say because she lost a long, long time ago.” Additionally, she is mostly inconsequential in my opinion. However, on a larger scale, let me interact since Hillary wishes to,” Donalds said.
Donalds said, “You were afraid you were going to lose, so you lied repeatedly, destroyed emails, destroyed evidence, and then you laundered phoney information that you knew was phoney into the intelligence community.” “I’m not going to listen to Hillary Clinton about who I should and shouldn’t support because you did all of this and you still lost.”
She has frequently told lies to the people of America. She spied on the campaign using our government. Yes, America, she did that. So if people like talking about Watergate and Nixon, look no further than Hillary Clinton and the Crossfire Hurricane.”
Last week, Clinton made headlines when she asserted that a second term of Trump in the White House would spell the “end of our country as we know it.”
Co-host of “The View,” Sunny Hostin, questioned Clinton about what she imagined a second Trump term might entail.
I am unable to even consider that. Since I believe it would mean the end of our nation as we know it,” Clinton said at the outset. “And I say that with seriousness.”
Then, after losing to Trump in 2016, the former first lady and secretary of state asserted that she supported giving him another shot.
I mean, I detested losing. Clinton went on, “And I particularly detested losing to him because I had noticed some red flags during the campaign.” “But I immediately said, ‘Look, we have to give him a chance; we’ve got to support, you know, the president we have,’ and I meant it.”
Indeed, for years following Trump’s election, Clinton referred to him as a “illegitimate president.”
“I made a lot of effort, but it was just accusations and fabrications from the moment of his inauguration,” she continued. “I saw everything I was worried about coming to pass, and I believe he would be even worse now because, believe it or not, he was restrained in the first term by people he hired because he thought they would support him and they refused to put up with him.”
Though no president in the modern era has tolerated appointments who later disagreed with her ideas, it is difficult to conceive that Clinton would do so if she were to win the presidency in the future.