Singer Springsteen calls Trump ‘great embarrassment’ to US

By AFP
24 September 2016
Singer Springsteen calls Trump ‘great embarrassment’ to US
US Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a campaign event at the Germain Arena in Fort Myers, Florida, USA, 19 September 2016. Photo: Cristobal Herrera/EPA

Rock legend Bruce Springsteen has described Donald Trump as an embarrassment to the United States, saying the Republican presidential candidate is a demagogue with simple solutions.
Springsteen, who has dramatized the plight of working-class Americans in his music, said he understands how Trump could seem "compelling" to people who are economically insecure.
"The absurdity is beyond cartoon-like. But he's gotten close enough (to the White House) so it can make you nervous," he told "Skavlan," a talk show in Norway and Sweden, during an interview released Friday.
"I don't think he's going to win, but even him running is a great embarrassment if you're an American," he said.
Trump knows how to tell voters "some of the things they want to hear," he added, including to people "uncomfortable with the browning of America."
"We have certain problems in the United States -- tremendous inequality of wealth distribution -- that makes for ripe ground for demagoguery," Springsteen said.
"He has a very simple answer to all these very, very complex problems."
Springsteen recorded the interview ahead of next week's release of his memoir "Born to Run," which describes his childhood in New Jersey and rise to fame.
Republican contender Trump and Democratic Party candidate Hillary Clinton are due to feature in a televised debate on Monday. 
The "Born in the USA" singer, famous for his onstage stamina, has drawn a diverse field of devoted fans for decades, including New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, one of Trump's most public backers.
Springsteen insisted for years that he would let his music speak for him but has been more openly political since the election in 2004, when he campaigned for John Kerry in his unsuccessful bid to win the White House from George W. Bush.
In a related development, American pop and movie stars have rallied together to star in a short video calling on Americans to vote but also hinting and the danger of voting for Trump. 
Social media worldwide is abuzz with both pro and anti-Trump propaganda, including a range of derogatory photos, several with Trump dressed up as the late Adolph Hitler, with claims that his rhetoric mirrors the popularity of the German leader during the 1930s.