Gowdy calls out Swalwell over just ‘another white guy’ comment, ‘sad’ state of politics
Former Republican Congressman Trey Gowdy on Tuesday called out Democratic presidential candidate Eric Swalwell over his "I may be another white guy" comment and called it an example of the sad state of politics.
Swalwell, a California lawmaker who launched his bid to become the president last month, has been struggling to get a footing in the crowded Democratic primary.
In
an interview on Monday with Vice News, Swalwell said, “A white guy who
doesn’t see other identities or understand other experiences should not
be president.”
“I do,” he said. “And where there would be gaps in
my knowledge or my experience, I will pass the mic to people who do have
that experience.”
Swalwell’s comments sit well with Gowdy who criticized them comment during an appearance on “The Story” with Martha MacCallum.
Former Republican Congressman Trey Gowdy lampooned Democratic
presidential candidate Eric Swalwell for admitting that him being “a
white guy” was a flaw in this election.
“Well, Eric’s
clearly riding a wave. I think he’s all the way up to zero in the
polling,” Gowdy said, referring to the recent Morning Consult poll that
shows the Democrat is supported by less than one percent of the surveyed
voters.
“I noticed throughout his political history he ran
against two women that I know of, so if he is concerned there aren’t
enough voices in Congress or in the city council he was on, he didn’t
have any qualms about running against two qualified women back then.
This is what I know and, luckily, what most of our fellow citizens
know,” he continued.
“I noticed throughout his
political history he ran against two women that I know of, so if he is
concerned there aren’t enough voices in Congress or in the city council
he was on, he didn’t have any qualms about running against two qualified
women back then." — Trey Gowdy
Gowdy
added that it’s “a sad reflection” that Swalwell thinks he can win
support by apologizing for things he has no control over.
“Logic,
objective truth, passion, empathy, no racial or gender strictures. If
you are a good person, I want you governing me regardless of any other
immutable characteristic,” he said.
“I think it is a sad
reflection on our politics if people are actually apologizing for things
over which they have absolutely no control at all and I think most of
my fellow citizens reject that and see this as just Eric pandering,
trying to climb all the way up to one percent in the polling.”
“I
think it is a sad reflection on our politics if people are actually
apologizing for things over which they have absolutely no control at all
and I think most of my fellow citizens reject that and see this as just
Eric pandering, trying to climb all the way up to one percent in the
polling.” — Trey Gowdy
This isn’t the
first time Swalwell tried to pander to the far-left of the party. From
the onset of his campaign, he promised to pick a woman as his running
mate because he’s a “white man” who knows “where I can't speak to
someone else's experience.”
Earlier
this month, Swalwell was also ridiculed after stumbling over his
knowledge of the Constitution in a bid to score political points and
complaining that the Constitution doesn’t mention “woman”. Many pointed
out that “Man” is also not mentioned in the Constitution.
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