WASHINGTON (AP) — Donald Trump asserted in the final presidential debate that no one respects women more than he does. Yet in its closing moments, standing onstage with the first major-party female presidential nominee in U.S. history, he called Hillary Clinton "such a nasty woman."
Political pundits of both parties expressed shock at the snipe, with many on social media and cable news identifying it as one of the Republican nominee's worst moments of the 90-minute meetup in Las Vegas.
Instantly, the Twitter hashtag "nastywoman" was born, with social media users making mostly positive comments about the Democratic nominee, and entrepreneurs began marketing T-shirts. A website riffing on it—nasty women get (expletive) done—redirects visitors to Clinton's campaign donation page.
The people running Clinton's Twitter account also made sure to highlight the disparity between Trump's statement earlier, "Nobody respects women more than me," and his "nasty woman" utterance.
Trump defenders, including conservative radio host Mark Levin, argued that both men and women can be "nasty" and that there was nothing sexist about his remark.
Just before Trump said that, Clinton seemed to get under his skin.
She'd been talking about her proposal to preserve Social Security and Medicare. Her plan, she noted, would raise taxes on the wealthy, including her and Trump. And then she added of the billionaire, who in the 1990s took nearly a $1 billion write-off for business losses: "Assuming he can't figure out how to get out of it."
As she continued talking Trump interjected, "Such a nasty woman." He raised his right hand to point his finger and shook his head, letting his mouth drop open in apparent disgust.
Clinton let the comment roll off her and continued pressing her case. She told reporters aboard her plane after the debate, "I just didn't pay any attention to that."
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