Story highlights
- Trump released Monday a statement calling for U.S. to refuse entry of foreign Muslims
- Trump's comments put U.S. national security at risk, Pentagon spokesman said without naming him
Washington (CNN)Donald
Trump's statement that Muslims should be banned from entering the
United States "disqualifies" him from being president, the White House
spokesman said Tuesday.
"The fact
is what Donald Trump said yesterday disqualifies him from serving as
president," White House press secretary Josh Earnest said in Tuesday's
press briefing. For a White House administration to so heavily weigh in
on an opposing party's nominating contest is a highly unusual step.
Earnest
noted first that every president must take an oath to "preserve,
protect and defend" the U.S. Constitution, and thus, he said, Trump
would not qualify.
The
GOP front-runner on Monday released a statement calling for the U.S. to
refuse entry of foreign Muslims. His proposal was met with widespread
criticism, including from several candidates in his own party.
But Earnest had harsh words for the GOP as
a whole, too, saying all GOP presidential candidates have signed a
pledge to support whoever is the eventual nominee.
"For
Republican candidates for president to stand by their pledge to support
Mr. Trump, that in and of itself is disqualifying," Earnest said. "The
question now is about the rest of the Republican Party and whether or
not they're going to be dragged into the dustbin of history with him.
And right now the current trajectory is not very good."
Earnest cited the election of House Majority Whip Steve Scalise, who a reporter said once joked he was like white supremacist David Duke "without the baggage," and a leaked Republican Senate campaign memo instructing candidates how to ride voters' support for Trump.
He
also noted that House Speaker Paul Ryan Tuesday said he would vote for
Trump if he were the GOP nominee -- though he omitted the fact that Ryan
unequivocally rebuked Trump's comments and said they were "not who we are as a party" and unconstitutional.
The White House spokesman on Tuesday also called Trump a "carnival barker."
"The Trump campaign for months now has had a dustbin of history-like quality to it," Earnest said.
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