Donald Trump's former campaign manager gets into a fiery exchange on CNN over Brexit
During a Monday morning interview on the network, Trump's former campaign manager exchanged rhetorical barbs with former New York City Council Speaker Christine Quinn over the United Kingdom's decision to leave the European Union last week. Lewandowski said that Clinton's opposition to the so-called "Brexit" demonstrated that she fundamentally misread the desires of the UK electorate.
"This is Hillary Clinton, who is the secretary of state, who says she has a better understanding of world political affairs than anybody else, and she couldn't see this vote coming?" Lewandowski asked.
"This is a person who prides herself on international affairs and couldn't understand what was actually taking place? It truly calls into question her ability to understand what's going on in other geopolitical areas around the world."
Quinn countered that leaders should promote outcomes that benefit constituents, rather than simply identify the politically popular position.
"Elected officials are supposed to be leaders not people who put their finger in the air and say what they believe voters are gonna say," Quinn said. "And what have we not heard from Donald Trump? What would his plan be if he was president to save American 401(k)s? We haven't heard that because that's not his concern."
But Lewandowski didn't back off his attacks, saying that Clinton and President Barack Obama were attempting to unfairly influence British voters.
"He didn't weigh in like Hillary Clinton did, like Barack Obama did saying that, 'You can't do this,'" Lewandowski said.
"Because he didn't know what it was," Quinn interjected, referencing a Hollywood Reporter article that indicated Trump wasn't familiar with the term "Brexit."
"He said 'You can do it because you decide on your own what the right thing to do is.' And Hillary Clinton had this so wrong that the people rejected her," Lewandowski said.
While just a week ago Trump's children were pushing Lewandowski out of the campaign, on Monday's morning shows, their arguments were virtually identical.
Appearing on "Fox and Friends" on Monday, Eric Trump said that it was neither Clinton or Obama's business to weigh in on the vote at all.
"She's supposed to be have her finger on the pulse of what's going on, and once again she got it wrong," Trump said of Clinton.
He added: "She's always gotten the foreign policy of our country wrong. Why did she even need to opine on this issue?"
The Clinton campaign has maintained that the vote has wide-ranging economic consequences for the US.
Speaking to a conference of mayors in Indianapolis on Sunday, Clinton slammed Trump's response to Brexit, claiming that the results of the vote took a $100 billion toll on American retirement savings accounts on Friday.
"We are resilient, and we will bounce back from this and from all of the other shocks that are in the system. But it is a reminder that what happens around the world has consequences that can hit home quickly and affect our lives and our livelihoods," Clinton said.
"We need leaders like yourselves at the local and state and federal level, who understand how to work with other leaders to manage risks; who understand that bombastic comments in turbulent times can actually cause more turbulence; and who put the interests of the American people ahead of their personal business interests."