Indian workers worst to understand, says Maine’s Republican Governor

Paul LePage’s remarks come a day after Donald Trump mocked Indian call centres.

April 24, 2016 12:36 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 04:11 am IST - Washington

This photo tweeted by @mainegop, the official handle of the the Maine Republican Party, shows the State’s Governor Paul LePage speaking at the party convention on Saturday.

This photo tweeted by @mainegop, the official handle of the the Maine Republican Party, shows the State’s Governor Paul LePage speaking at the party convention on Saturday.

Indian workers are the “worst” and the “hardest” ones to understand, Republican Governor of U.S. State of Maine Paul LePage said, stirring another controversy by his party members in this election cycle.

In his address to the Maine Republican convention, where the party selected its delegates for the July national convention, Mr. Page alleged that foreign workers are being used in local restaurants.

Mr. LePage said workers from India are “hardest” and “the worst ones” to understand and one has to get an interpreter to talk to an Indian. However, he then quickly described Indians as “lovely” people.

Mr. LaPage’s remarks came a day after >Donald Trump mocked Indian call centres but described India as a “great place“.

However, both Mr. LePage and Mr. Trump suffered a setback at the Maine Convention, which elected 19 of the 23 delegates who are Ted Cruz supporters.

Maine is a small northeastern State in the U.S.

In his speech, Mr. LePage was highly critical of Mr. Cruz, accusing him of “stabbing us in the back”.

“We reached a deal with Cruz’s national campaign to put up a unity slate that would honour the wishes of the thousands of Mainers who voted at caucus. But Cruz’s Northeast Political Director David Sawyer lied to us and broke the deal. Sawyer stabbed us in the back, reneged on the unity slate and betrayed the people of Maine,” he said in a statement.

Meanwhile, Mr. Cruz notched up more delegates than Mr. Trump on Saturday. He won at least 65 of the 94 delegates up for grabs over the weekend.

As of Saturday, Mr. Trump had 845 delegates against 559 of Mr. Cruz.

A candidate needs to have at least 1,237 delegates to earn the Republican presidential nomination.

Primaries are still to be held in 15 States, with the next round of primaries to be held in Maryland, Delaware, Philadelphia, Rhode Island and Connecticut on Tuesday.

Polls show that Mr. Trump is leading in all these States.

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