3:00 p.m Update:



After a day of Republican leaders urging Donald Trump to withdraw from the race, the presidential candidate took to his own Twitter to send a message to those denouncing him:





Trump is in hot water for crude comments he made in 2005 about women.



1:15 p.m Update:



South Dakota state representative Kristi Noem denounced Trump’s comments on her own Twitter Saturday.





Noem’s democratic challenger for the US House seat, Paula Hawks, released a statement Saturday calling on Noem to disavow Trump:





“It has never been about electing the best nominee to lead the country. Her choice has been dictated by party loyalty above all else. Party loyalty might get you a seat on fancy committees in Washington D.C., but it also risks electing a racist misogynistic scumbag who literally endangers the fabric of democracy.[…] I urge Kristi Noem to reject Donald Trump and explain in great detail what she actually supported about Trump in the first place. We deserve an answer.”

South Dakota Republican leaders are calling for Donald Trump to withdraw from the presidential race after video surfaced from 2005 of the republican presidential nominee making sexist comments towards women.



Senator John Thune took to Twitter Saturday, calling on Trump to withdraw and to make Governor Mike Pence the new nominee.





Not only did Republican Governor Dennis Daugaard re-tweet Thune, but made a tweet of his own that says, “Enough is enough.”





Trump has publicly apologized for his 2005 comments, but several Republican leaders across the country are withdrawing their support.





