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Barrack Obama blasts Donald Trump

President Obama, speaking Wednesday in Canada, offered a lengthy and passionate rebuttal to what he described as Donald Trumpโ€™s โ€œanti-immigration sentiment.โ€

Atย a summit with the leaders of the United States, Canada and Mexico in Ottawa,ย a reporter asked at a joint press conference if they had discussed Trumpโ€™s sometimes caustic rhetoric toward Mexico and if the mogulโ€™s populist campaign affected the tradeย negotiations among the three countries.

Mexican President Enrique Peรฑa Nieto began by saying his government would respect the outcome of the U.S. election, which he described as a domestic matter, according to the summitโ€™s translation of Peรฑa Nietoโ€™s remarks.

Obama, speaking next and withoutย saying Trumpโ€™s name, was far more forceful in his denunciation of the presumptive GOP nominee.

โ€œI think Iโ€™ve made myself clear, setting aside whatever the candidates are saying, that America is a nation of immigrants,โ€ Obama said. โ€œThatโ€™s our strength. Unless, you are one of the first Americans โ€” unless you are a Native Americanย โ€”ย somebody, somewhere in your past showed up from someplace else. And they didnโ€™t always have papers.โ€

Trumpโ€™s rhetoric and policy proposals have sparked a number of firestorms throughout the campaign. Among other things, Trump launched his White House bid with a speech accusing the Mexican government of sending criminals across the U.S. border. He also proposed temporarily barring Muslim tourists and immigrants from entering the U.S.

But Obama insisted Wednesday that it was nothing new for anti-immigration viewsย to be โ€œexploited by demagogues.โ€

โ€œIt was directed at the Irish. It was directed at Poles and Italians. And you can go back and read what was said about those groups,โ€ the president recalled. โ€œAnd itโ€™s identical what theyโ€™re now saying about Mexicans or Guatemalans or Salvadorans or Muslims or Asians. Same stuff: โ€˜Theyโ€™re different. Theyโ€™re not going to fit. They wonโ€™t assimilate. They bring crime.โ€™ Same arguments.โ€

Obama continued: โ€œBut guess what? They kept coming. And they kept coming because America offered possibility for their children and their grandchildren. And even if they were initially discriminated against, they understood that our system will over time allow them to become part of this one American family. And so we should take some of this rhetoric seriously โ€” and answer it boldly and clearly. But you shouldnโ€™t think that is representative of how the American people think.โ€

He also stressed that illegal immigration had fallen under his administration and that the next president would have to tackle the broader problems within the U.S. immigration system.

โ€œIโ€™m pushing very hard โ€” and will continue to push until I leave this office, and expect our next president to push for โ€” a comprehensive immigration reform plan that can fix those aspects of the system that are broken so that we remain a nation of laws and a nation of immigrants,โ€ he said.

This article was contributed by Colin Campbell, Deputy Politics Editor of Yahoo News

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