Trump mocks sanford, latest gop challenger, for cheating with ‘flaming dancer’

Trump mocks sanford, latest gop challenger, for cheating with ‘flaming dancer’


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Mark Sanford hopes to topple Trump. Photo: William B. Plowman/NBC via Getty Images Mark Sanford, the former South Carolina governor and congressman, announced Sunday that he’ll become the


third Republican to challenge Donald Trump for the party’s 2020 presidential nomination. Like the other two, Sanford is an extreme long shot, but that didn’t stop Trump from lobbing an


attack over his affair with a woman he incorrectly described as a “flaming dancer.” On Monday, Trump mocked Sanford for losing his congressional seat in a GOP primary last year (Trump


endorsed his opponent, who went on to lose to a Democrat) and for his infamous “hike” on the Appalachian Trail a decade ago. > When the former Governor of the Great State of South 


Carolina, > @MarkSanford, was reported missing, only to then say he was away > hiking on the Appalachian Trail, then was found in Argentina with > his Flaming Dancer friend, it 


sounded like his political career was > over. It was,.... > — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) September 9, 2019 > ...but then he ran for Congress and won, only to lose his 


re-elect > after I Tweeted my endorsement, on Election Day, for his opponent. > But now take heart, he is back, and running for President of the > United States. The Three Stooges, 


all badly failed candidates, will > give it a go! > — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) September 9, 2019 Despite serving several terms in Congress in the ’90s, two terms as South


Carolina’s governor, and then returning to Congress in 2011, Sanford is still best known for disappearing from Columbia for a week in the summer of 2009. At the time, his staff explained he


was on a hiking trip. That wasn’t true. Sanford, who was married at the time, was in Argentina with his “soul mate,” Maria Belén Chapur. Trump, a man who’s bragged about his own infidelity,


appears to believe Chapur was a “flaming dancer,” which might be a misspelling of “flamingo dancer,” which might be what Trump thinks “flamenco dancers” are called. But as CNN’s Daniel Dale


notes, there’s no evidence Chapur has ever been a flamenco dancer. Sanford joins former Massachusetts governor Bill Weld and former tea party congressman Joe Walsh in the Republican primary


against Trump. And while none of them has much of a chance to dent Trump’s support, Sanford said Monday that, as a bloc, the “Three Stooges,” as Trump labeled them this morning, send a


powerful message. > “I think it strengthens it. What the administration is basically > said — what the Trump campaign has said is: it was just Bill Weld > for a while, it’s a voice 


crying in the wilderness, it’s — pay > it no attention. All of a sudden, when you end up with three > candidates and three different candidates saying there’s something > wrong with


 this presidency, what’s going on here is not consistent > with the Republican Party that we know about, believe in and > invested major portions of our life in, that’s a different


> conversation,” Sanford told CNN’s John Berman on “New Day.” Sanford’s being optimistic. It’s not clear that anyone in a position of power within the Republican Party is eager to get rid


of Trump. And it’s abundantly clear that his main issues — the debt and deficit — don’t matter at all to today’s GOP. But as someone known for a quixotic journey that turned into a


high-profile public embarrassment, Sanford doesn’t have anything to lose.