Tuesday, June 16, 2026
ADVT 
National

Indian, American Protesters Denounce Trump For Divisiveness

The Canadian Press, 17 Oct, 2016 01:46 PM
    Presidential candidate Donald Trump's address to an anti-terrorism rally organised by the Republican Hindu Coalition drew protests by some Indian Americans and Democratic Party politicians.
     
    At a news conference held some distance away because of the tight security surrounding Trump, New Jersey Assemblyman Raj Mukherji said: "If you are a real Hindu, you are also a Muslim; if you are a real Hindu, you are also a Christian; if you are a real Hindu, you are also a Jew.
     
    "Because that is what my diaspora community believes in, and that is why we are overwhelmingly going to elect Hillary Clinton as the next President of the United States," he declared.
     
    Congressman Frank Pallone said Trump would create more divisiveness in New Jersey because of his comments against Muslims and immigrants.
     
    Appealing to a broader South Asian community, he added: "It's important for us to be here today to say that (Trump's) values are not the values of ... the South Asian community."
     
    The news conference was organised by South Asians for Hillary. 
     
     
    The New Jersey representative of the group, Amit Jani, said: "We don't think it's right for someone from out of the state to come here and raise political issues with our faith and say they speak for over 3.4 million Indian-Americans across the country, even more Muslim-Americans, and the South Asian communities as a whole."
     
    Muslim community leaders Shariq Ahmad, Sam Khan and Imtiaz Syed, and Hindu community leaders Raju Patel and Sunita Viswanath of the Coalition of Progressive Hindus also spoke at the news conference.
     
    The protesters, however, were vastly outnumbered by the 8,000 people who came to the Trump rally.
     
    A clutch of protesters gathered in front of a banner announcing the Trump on the route to the venue rally with signs that read, "End Caste apartheid," "Dump Trump" and "South Asians Against Trump".
     
    A series of opinion polls by the National Asian American Survey showed that Trump's support among registered Indian American voters slipped from 11 percent in May to seven percent this month, while his Democratic Party opponent, Hillary Clinton held steady at 71 percent.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Teen Girl Calls 911 Saying She Was Forced To Go On Vacation With Parents: Cops

    Teen Girl Calls 911 Saying She Was Forced To Go On Vacation With Parents: Cops
    Provincial police say a 15-year-old girl from Mississauga, west of Toronto, called the emergency line last Tuesday while at a rental cottage in Trent Hills, near Belleville.

    Teen Girl Calls 911 Saying She Was Forced To Go On Vacation With Parents: Cops

    Saskatchewan Town Of Tisdale Officially Changes 'Land Of Rape And Honey' Slogan

    Town council voted last fall in favour of a rebrand after a survey found a majority of Tisdale's 3,200 residents wanted to drop the town's nearly 60-year-old motto.

    Saskatchewan Town Of Tisdale Officially Changes 'Land Of Rape And Honey' Slogan

    CP Freight Train Derails In Toronto, No Injuries, No Public Safety Threat: Police

    CP Freight Train Derails In Toronto, No Injuries, No Public Safety Threat: Police
      CP Rail said the incident occurred around 5:20 a.m. on Sunday, when a freight train with two locomotives struck another CP freight train.

    CP Freight Train Derails In Toronto, No Injuries, No Public Safety Threat: Police

    Jane Philpott Admits Could've Been Clearer When She Claimed She'd Never Used Limos

    Jane Philpott Admits Could've Been Clearer When She Claimed She'd Never Used Limos
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeauand his cabinet went back to school Sunday with one minister — Jane Philpott — trying to shed her newfound reputation as a problem pupil.

    Jane Philpott Admits Could've Been Clearer When She Claimed She'd Never Used Limos

    Uh, Oh, Canada: 1,500 People Returned To Michigan After Floating Across Border

    Uh, Oh, Canada: 1,500 People Returned To Michigan After Floating Across Border
    The individuals were participating in the Port Huron Float Down, an annual event on the river that divides Michigan from Ontario. But the winds turned it into an international incident on Sunday.

    Uh, Oh, Canada: 1,500 People Returned To Michigan After Floating Across Border

    CBC Says An Average Of Just Over Four Million Tuned In For Hip Broadcast

    CBC Says An Average Of Just Over Four Million Tuned In For Hip Broadcast
    CBC says an average of 4.04 million people tuned in on TV or via livestreaming.

    CBC Says An Average Of Just Over Four Million Tuned In For Hip Broadcast