Gaffe-prone Spicer apologised on national television yesterday for comparing the Nazi leader with Syrian President Bashar al Assad, accused of using Sarin gas against his own people including children, an attack which had rattled Trump so much that he ordered missile strikes on a Syrian air base.
"I mistakenly used an inappropriate and insensitive reference to the Holocaust for which, frankly, there is no comparison," Spicer told CNN hours after he made the remarks.
Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi demanded Spicer be fired. "Sean Spicer must be fired, and the president must immediately disavow his spokesman's statements. Either he is speaking for the President, or the president should have known better than to hire him," Pelosi said.
House Democratic Whip Steny H Hoyer said Spicer's remarks were "indicative of the extraordinary lack of knowledge, perspective, and sensitivity that the Trump administration has brought to Washington."
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Nita M Lowey, ranking member of the House Appropriations Committee, said it was disturbing that Trump's chief spokesman has "either a cavalier aversion to facts, is completely unmoored from reality, or both."
Rep Lee Zeldin, a Jewish Republican from New York, said in a statement reported by The New York Times that "as far as comments being made and comparisons of various tactics and methods between now and World War II, you can make the comparison a little differently and it would be accurate, but it's important to clear up that Hitler did in fact use chemical warfare to murder innocent people."
"So you have to, if you're Russia, ask yourself is this a country that you and a regime that you want to align yourself with?"
In a statement to White House reporters, Spicer said in no way he was trying to lessen the horrendous nature of the Holocaust. "Any attack on innocent people is reprehensible and inexcusable.