Jeb Bush and Chris Christie join Democrats in denouncing proposal – but Ted Cruz stops short of criticizing Republican frontrunner

This article is more than 4 years old

This article is more than 4 years old

Donald Trump’s proposal to ban all Muslim entry into the US, including that of tourists and Muslim Americans overseas, was met with an immediate and massive backlash from across the political spectrum.

Republican presidential candidates moved quickly to condemn their party’s frontrunner, with Jeb Bush describing Trump as “unhinged” and Lindsey Graham calling on everyone seeking the presidency to denounce the plan. Even former vice-president Dick Cheney, as the Republican establishment began to chime in, told a conservative radio host the call “goes against everything we believe in”.

“Donald Trump today took xenophobia and religious bigotry to a new level,” Graham told the Guardian in an interview shortly after Trump unveiled his proposal.

“His comments are hurting the war effort and putting our diplomats and soldiers serving in the Middle East at risk. The way to win this war is to reach to the vast majority of people in Islamic faith who reject Isil and provide them the capability to resist this ideology.”

Bush, the former Florida governor, responded on Twitter:

Jeb Bush (@JebBush) Donald Trump is unhinged. His "policy" proposals are not serious.

The mayor of St Petersburg in Florida, Rick Kriseman, said he was banning Trump from the city “until we fully understand the dangerous threat posed by all Trumps”.

New Jersey governor Chris Christie said Trump’s comments reflected “a ridiculous position and one that won’t even be productive”.

“We do not need to resort to that type of activity nor should we,” Christie told conservative radio show host Michael Medved. “We need to cooperate with peaceful Muslim Americans who want to give us intelligence against those who are radicalized.”

“To ban Muslims from entering the country is just someone who is speaking from no experience,” he added. “There are folks in this race that don’t care what the law says because they are used to firing people indiscriminately. You do not need to be banning Muslims from the country.”

Ohio governor John Kasich, one of the more vocal critics of Trump, was quick to reject his proposal.

“This is just more of the outrageous divisiveness that characterizes his every breath and another reason why he is entirely unsuited to lead the United States,” Kasich said.

Florida senator Marco Rubio was among the last of the presidential candidates to weigh in, but tweeted his disapproval of Trump’s plan.



“I disagree with Donald Trump’s latest proposal. His habit of making offensive and outlandish statements will not bring Americans together,” Rubio wrote. “The next President better be somebody who can unite our country to face the great challenges of the 21st Century.”

Graham further added that every candidate should condemn Trump’s statement and specifically singled out Texas senator Ted Cruz.



“It is time for Ted Cruz to quit hiding in the weeds and speak out against Donald Trump’s xenophobia and racial bigotry,” Graham said.



But Cruz and a handful of other Republican contenders were unwilling to denounce Trump.

Cruz, who is competing neck-and-neck with Trump in the early voting state of Iowa, said “that is not my policy” when a reporter raised the topic on the campaign trail.

“Listen, I don’t believe most Americans are using language against Muslim Americans. We are using language against radical Islamic terrorists, but I am going to focus on language I use,” Cruz said.

“I believe the focus should focus on radical Islamic terrorism and we need to be directly focused on threats to the United States. We need a commander-in-chief that perceives what the threat is and targets all of our resources against radical Islamic terrorists.”

The presidential campaign of Kentucky senator Rand Paul initially declined to comment, then issued a statement that did not explicitly criticize Trump. Instead, it drew attention to Paul’s own legislation designed to block visitors from Muslim majority countries.

“Senator Rand Paul has led on the issue of border security, proposing real solutions. That’s why earlier this month he introduced legislation to block visitors and immigrants from nations with known radical elements while a new system is developed to screen properly,” campaign spokesman Sergio Gor wrote.

Ben Carson said everyone visiting the country should be registered and monitored during their stay, as is the policy of other countries. But the retired neurosurgeon, who said earlier this year that the US should not elect a Muslim president, did not embrace Trump’s plan. “We do not and would not advocate being selective on one’s religion,” Carson said.

Former Hewlett-Packard chief executive Carly Fiorina linked Trump’s comments to Barack Obama’s nationwide address on Sunday on the fight against Isis.



“Unfortunately, Donald Trump’s overreaction is as dangerous as Obama’s under-reaction,” Fiorina said.

Rick Santorum also shied away from being overtly critical of Trump. The second-time presidential candidate said he would not support a ban on all Muslim travel to the US, but blamed the Obama administration for not treating Islam as a problem or having a proper vetting process for immigrants.

“So I understand why Donald Trump is saying what he’s saying,” Santorum told conservative radio show host Hugh Hewitt.



Democrats immediately pounced on Trump’s release, with several lawmakers dubbing it fascism.

Former Maryland governor Martin O’Malley tweeted:

Martin O'Malley (@MartinOMalley) .@realdonaldtrump removes all doubt: he is running for President as a fascist demagogue.

Presidential candidate Hillary Clinton said:

Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) This is reprehensible, prejudiced and divisive. @RealDonaldTrump, you don't get it. This makes us less safe. -H https://t.co/SjAqL0clHd

Vermont senator Bernie Sanders also responded on Twitter, saying Trump and others “want us to hate all Muslims”.

“The US is a strong nation when we stand together. We are weak when we allow racism and xenophobia to divide us. cc: @realDonaldTrump,” Sanders wrote. “Demagogues throughout our history have attempted to divide us based on race, gender, sexual orientation or country of origin.”

A top aide to Barack Obama said Trump’s proposal was “totally contrary to our values as Americans”.

“It’s also contrary to our security,” Ben Rhodes, the White House’s deputy national security advisor, said during an appearance on CNN. “We should be making it harder for Isil to portray this as a war between the United States and Islam, not easier.”

The White House spokesman, Josh Earnest, later told MSNBC that Trump was “seeking to tap into a darker side, a darker element” of the country and trying “to play into people’s fears”.

The rhetoric, he added, was “entirely inconsistent” with the values “that were central to the founding of this country”.

