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Trump attacks civil rights leader who questioned his election win

By AFP
January 15, 2017

WASHINGTON: President-elect Donald Trump began a long holiday weekend that honors slain black civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. by attacking another rights activist and politician who had said he doesn´t see Trump as a "legitimate president".

Democratic Representative John Lewis, of Georgia, said on a segment of "Meet the Press" released by NBC on Friday he thought hacking by Russians had helped Trump, a Republican, get elected  in November.

Lewis said he does not plan to attend Trump´s Jan. 20 inauguration, the first time he would miss such an event since being elected to the House in 1986.

On Saturday Trump tweeted that Lewis had falsely complained about the election results and instead "should spend more time on fixing and helping his district, which is in horrible shape and falling apart (not to mention crime infested).

""All talk, talk, talk - no action or results. Sad!" Trump tweeted. During the campaign, Trump said Democrats had failed African-Americans and Hispanics.

"What the hell do you have to lose? Give me a chance," he said at a rally last year in Ohio. Trump won the presidency with less support from black and Hispanic voters than any president in the last 40 years, only 8 percent and 28 percent respectively, polling data showed.

Lewis, who has been a civil rights leader for more than half a century, was beaten by police during a march he helped lead in 1965 in Selma, Alabama, drawing attention to hurdles for blacks to vote.

He protested alongside King that day and on other occasions. "I believe in forgiveness," Lewis said in the NBC segment about Trump.

"I believe in trying to work with people," he said. "It´s going to be very difficult. I don´t see this president-elect as a legitimate president. "At least 10 other Democratic U.S. politicians have also said they plan to skip the inauguration including Representatives Raul Grijalva, Lacy Clay and Mark Takano.

Supporters of Trump see him as a brash person who tells things as they are. His comments about Lewis came ahead of an anti-Trump march in Washington headed by the Rev. Al Sharpton.

The protest by about 2,000 marchers kicked off a week of rallies planned by dozens of groups against Trump before, during and after the inauguration.