Republican Presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks at Saint Anselm College June 13, in Manchester, N.H. | Getty Trump promises 'Sister Souljah moment'

When it comes to fully and completely repudiating the racist, anti-Semitic and otherwise unsavory viewpoints that compose a portion of his supporters, Donald Trump said Thursday that he is willing to have a "Sister Souljah moment." In fact, the presumptive Republican nominee said he already has.

Appearing on conservative pundit Hugh Hewitt's radio show Thursday morning ahead of a trip to Scotland, Trump received multiple suggestions and pointers for how to best take on Hillary Clinton and her supporters in the general election. One such idea, according to Hewitt: "a Sister Souljah moment where you rebuke the crazy 1 percent out there who say they’re with you but are anti-Semitic and supremacists and all, that you know."


"When Bill Clinton did the Sister Souljah moment, you could use one of those," Hewitt said, in reference to the former president who as a candidate in 1992 rejected remarks from the hip-hop activist in the wake of the Rodney King riots in which she suggested, "I mean, if black people kill black people every day, why not have a week and kill white people?" Clinton responded by saying that if "white" were substituted for black, "you might think David Duke was giving that speech."

Hewitt added, "I would love to hear you rebuke these people," which happens to include Duke, whose support Trump disavowed after appearing reluctant to do so in an incident he blamed on a faulty CNN earpiece.

"I see, OK, I would do that," Trump promised. "I certainly have done that, and I think very, very strongly. Now when you say the 1 percent, you’re talking about who?"

"Now, just the craziest people who say they’re with Donald Trump, and they’re not with you. You don’t like them, you reject them, but they say they’re with you," Hewitt said.

Trump remarked that he "rejected them so strongly and so harshly, and then people say he didn’t reject them fast enough, breaking news, you know, it’s like unbelievable."

"The one case, I was on television, I rejected them on television," Trump said. "I then rejected them on Twitter, where I have a lot, you know, where I have, well, between Facebook and Twitter, we have over 20 million people. I rejected them on Twitter, @realDonaldTrump, by the way, I’ll get in a plug. But I totally rejected them on Twitter immediate after, and I still was, like it wasn’t fast enough. It’s a very unfair system. I’ll tell you what. The system is so unfair, so unfair."