Miss Universe weight-shamed by Trump, rallies behind Clinton
Alicia Machado , the former Miss universe has alleged that Donald Trump labeled her with a sexist nickname - "Miss Piggy" when she gained wiegh after winning the crown- causing her shame and humiliation. In
Alicia Machado , the former Miss universe has alleged that Donald Trump labeled her with a sexist nickname - "Miss Piggy" when she gained wiegh after winning the crown- causing her shame and humiliation.
In May 1996, the Venezuelan beauty queen was just 19 years old when she was crowned the winner of the Miss Universe pageant, which had recently been bought by the Manhattan business mogul.
But, unfortunately, the year which should have been a momentous one turned out to be the most traumatizing one of her life when she put on weight soon after winning. Trump shamed her about about gaining weight, calling her things like “Miss Piggy” and “an eating machine”. It wasn’t even that he did so publicly.
Two decades later, Machado's dealings with Trump, her one-time beauty pageant boss, are reverberating through the 2016 campaign as the Republican businessman and reality TV star seeks the White House.
Democratic rival Hillary Clinton told Machado's story toward the end of Monday's first presidential debate, scolding Trump for referring to the Venezuelan-born actress as "Miss Housekeeping," as Clinton said, "because she was Latina."
"Donald, she has a name," Clinton said, prompting Trump to ask, "Where did you find this?"
Clinton said, "Her name is Alicia Machado and she has become a U.S. citizen, and you can bet she's going to vote this November."
Asked about the exchange during an interview Tuesday with "Fox and Friends," Trump said Machado was "the worst we ever had," adding: "She gained a massive amount of weight. It was a real problem. We had a real problem."
On CNN Tuesday night, Machado said she thinks Trump believes women are "a second class of people."
"I love this country," Machado said. "I don't want to have some misogynist president."
Clinton's embrace of Machado brought comparisons to her campaign's defense of Khizr Khan, whose son was killed while protecting other US soldiers in Iraq. Khan spoke at the Democratic National Convention, holding up a copy of the US Constitution while accusing Trump of smearing the character of Muslims.
Clinton's campaign is trying to mobilize Latinos and women in November's election and has assailed Trump for derogatory comments about women in the past. It quickly released a web video detailing Machado's story, portraying her as a mortified pageant winner whom Trump called "fat" or "ugly" and blindsided by inviting reporters to watch her work out.
Machado went on a diet in 1997 after saying she gained at least 15 pounds. Trump said during Machado's workout in front of the media that year that "she likes to eat - like all of us" and supported her weight-loss efforts.
She was embroiled in controversy of a different sort one year later, after a judge in Venezuela accused her of threatening to kill him after he indicted her then-boyfriend for attempted murder. The boyfriend, Juan Rafael Rodriguez Regetti, was accused of shooting and wounding his sister's husband, whom he blamed for his sister's suicide. The victim's family accused Machado of driving her boyfriend's getaway car, but she denied any involvement and apparently was never indicted, due to lack of evidence.
Now a US citizen, Machado told reporters Tuesday in a conference call arranged by the Clinton campaign that her experience with Trump could "open eyes" in the presidential election. She said she was "really surprised" to hear Clinton refer to her story during the debate - she said she was overcome with emotion and started crying - but wanted to help Clinton in the election.
After the debate, Machado tweeted her thanks to Clinton, writing in Spanish: "Thanks Mrs. Hillary Clinton. Your respect for women and our differences makes you great. I'm with you."
In June, Machado appeared at a news conference in Virginia held by immigrant advocacy groups to encourage Latino voters to support Clinton.
"I want to keep working on my campaigns for women's equality, for respect for women and that our physical appearances do not define us productive or intelligent beings," Machado told reporters in Spanish. "We are more than what we look like physically, that's my point."