Governor
Schwarzenegger condemns Trump
Arnold
Schwarzenegger: Trump’s Immigration Ban Makes U.S. ‘Look Stupid’
Celebrity Apprentice
host Arnold Schwarzenegger was straightforward about his thoughts on
President Donald Trump's recent immigration and travel ban, saying Monday he
believes it is a mistake that "was vetted badly" and "makes us
look stupid."
The actor and former
California governor, who took over Apprentice hosting duties from
Trump earlier this month, told Extra on Monday of the ban, "I think
that the real problem is that it was vetted badly."
"I know what he's
trying to accomplish," he continued, "and his fear of having people
come in from other places and cause harm to the country and all of that stuff,
but there is another way of going about it and doing it the right way to
accomplish the same goals. And so I think that they were hasty with it."
President Trump's
immigration and travel ban sparked protests at
airports across the country over
the weekend, with people, including L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti, speaking out
against the detention of travelers. The executive order, signed
Friday, targets people from countries including Iran, Iraq, Syria, Libya,
Sudan, Somalia and Yemen.
Schwarzenegger said he
could relate to people having trouble with green cards ("I was in that
position") and that he believes the ban "is crazy and it makes us
look stupid when the White House is ill-prepared to put these kind of executive
orders out there."
"At the same
time, I have to say I went through some of those problems when I was
governor," he conceded. "You go in there new with a new team and
mistakes are made. I hope that this is a wake-up call for them."
The ban was a hot topic at Sunday
night's SAG Awards, with a majority of
the presenters and winners addressing the issue onstage. Among the winners,
Veep's Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Stranger Things' David Harbour and Moonlight's
Mahershala Ali addressed the issue and the continuing protests over the
weekend, with Ali delivering an emotionally charged speech about being a Muslim
in America.
Also on Monday,
Schwarzenegger said in an interview with Access Hollywood that he
doesn't agree with the idea that celebrities shouldn't use that sort of venue
to speak their mind. "People have to choose where they want to get their
statements out" and "everyone picks a different place to do it. That
was, for them, a perfect place to do it, and I personally don't mind at
all."
"And as a matter
of fact," he added, "there's a lot of people in the entertainment
business that would like to be in politics, so the question is just who really
would have the guts to do it. It's all about, 'Do you have the balls to do it?'
The minute you step into politics, 50 percent of the people immediately don't
like you."
"I think entertainers like to be in
politics and be involved in policy, and I think that people in Washington like
to be in Hollywood," he said, adding that senators have often asked him to
be in his movies.
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