Jane Fonda on Donald Trump: 'I don't hate him. I feel sad for him'
(CNN)Actress
and activist Jane Fonda said she thinks President Donald Trump's
actions on climate change are "criminal" and that now is the time for
"bold ideas."
"I
don't hate him. I feel sad for him," Fonda said of Trump Saturday on
CNN's "The Van Jones Show." "And what he's doing to the world ... is
just criminal. It's just criminal. It's terrible. But there's more of
us, and we can make a difference."
Fonda has been arrested multiple times in the last two months
at the US Capitol during her protests to raise awareness about the
climate crisis, which she calls "Fire Drill Fridays." Trump addressed
her arrests in a November 6 campaign rally in Louisiana, telling the crowd: "Nothing changes. ... She always has the handcuffs on her."
Fonda
said when Trump became President, she wanted to get "a lot of very
beautiful women who are very, very smart about climate" -- citing Pamela
Anderson as an example -- to make the case of climate changes' urgency
to Trump.
She said she spoke with
Trump's senior advisers and daughter and son-in-law, Ivanka Trump and
Jared Kushner, but did not hear back from them again.
"He's a petroleum president...
they are so in bed with the fossil fuel industry that there's nothing
that even Pamela Anderson could get out of Donald Trump," Fonda told Van
Jones during the interview, which is set to air Saturday at 7 p.m. ET
on CNN.
Fonda also told Jones that
a female candidate in the Democratic field can beat Trump in 2020,
despite the outcome in the 2016 election.
"I do not agree with (former President Barack) Obama that this is not a time for bold ideas," she said, referring to Obama's warning to Democratic presidential hopefuls against going so far on certain policies that they become out of step with voters.
Voters,
Obama said earlier this month, are "less revolutionary than ...
interested in improvement" and that candidates shouldn't be "diluted
into thinking that the resistance to certain approaches to things is
simply because voters haven't heard a bold enough proposal." Obama said
at the time that his comments were not meant to be a "criticism to the
activist wing" because those people should be pushing the party, but
added that the "candidates' job, whoever that ends up being, is to get
elected" and warned them from thinking that "if you get so far out and
you think automatically people will follow" because you are being "bold
and creative."
"I
think this is exactly the time that people need to be brave and offer
bold ideas. ... Hillary Clinton didn't have an answer for the people
that are so hurting in the middle of the country," Fonda said. "Donald
Trump, you know, whatever we think of him, he had bold ideas."
"...I
was all over the middle of the country before the election, and there
was no noise from Hillary," Fonda added. "So that was a big mistake."
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