Republican presidential contenders Florida Sen Marco Rubio and former Texas Gov Rick Perry said Trump, with his latest bombast, has demonstrated he is not fit to be president.
At an Iowa candidate forum yesterday, Trump dismissed Republican Sen John McCain's reputation as a war hero, saying the Navy pilot was merely taken captive after being shot down in Vietnam and "I like people who weren't captured."
"I will say what I want to say," Trump said today, claiming a strong record of supporting veterans and accusing McCain of failing them in Washington.
A McCain spokesman has said the Arizona lawmaker would have no comment about Trump's remarks.
Also Read
Although unrepentant, Trump allowed after the Iowa event that McCain might be a hero after all, but said people who "fought hard and weren't captured and went through a lot, they get no credit." And he said today about the Republican race: "I'm certainly not pulling out."
Weeks ago, after Trump asserted that Mexican immigrants are rapists and drug dealers, Hispanic leaders were incensed not only about those remarks but about the slow and halting response from others seeking the Republican nomination. But the fallout from Trump's latest salvo has spread quickly and indicates that at least some of his competitors are losing their inhibitions about repudiating him.
Rubio said on CNN's "State of the Union" that Trump insulted all prisoners of war, not just McCain, the 2008 Republican presidential nominee defeated by Barack Obama.
Perry, one of the few military veterans running for president, said Trump has demonstrated he has neither the character nor the temperament for the White House. "Over the top," the former Texas governor said of Trump on NBC's "Meet the Press." "Really offensive.