Democratic presidential hopeful Bernie Sanders used a Monday speech in Atlantic City, New Jersey to attack presumptive GOP nominee Donald Trump and Carl Icahn, one of his most vocal supporters. In response, the billionaire investor said the senator from Vermont was wrong about his personal attack — but generally right on his overall message. "We need to tell the Carl Icahns of the world that that greed is not acceptable," Sanders said in his speech, according to The Philadelphia Inquirer. Sanders spoke out against Icahn's involvement in stripping some Trump Taj Mahal workers' benefits when he took control of the casino during bankruptcy, the report said.

In his response, Icahn criticized Sanders for not "even bothering to give me a call to hear my views and the real facts." Those facts, he said, include that "few would disagree that the Taj would have closed with thousands of job losses if I hadn't come in and provided tens of millions in capital to save it and save those jobs." Icahn also criticized the casino workers' union, which has endorsed Sanders. And then Icahn — the vocal Trump supporter, who has called his candidate a "no-brainer" — said he agreed with Sanders.