Carly Fiorina thumps Trump for being too nice to Democratic front-runner and says he should 'throw a little more heat Hillary Clinton's way'

  • Carly Fiorina says she's sick of being the only GOP candidate consistently critical of Hillary Clinton and suggested Donald Trump should help
  • Donald Trump has confused mainstream Republicans by hitting Jeb Bush harder than Hillary Clinton 
  • Other candidates have complained about the Donald's formerly cozy relationship with Hillary and Bill

Carly Fiorina said Monday morning that she shouldn't be the only Republican candidate outspoken enough to tear into Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton – and offered Donald Trump the job. 

'For heaven's sakes, I actually wish Mr. Trump would throw a little more heat Hillary Clinton's way,' Fiorina said Monday during a broadcast of 'Fox & Friends.'

'I feel sometimes as though I'm the only candidate who's consistently been critical of her.'

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ALL BY HERSELF: Carly Fiorina said on Fox and Friends that she'd like to see Republican frontrunner Donald Trump join her in some Hillary bashing

ALL BY HERSELF: Carly Fiorina said on Fox and Friends that she'd like to see Republican frontrunner Donald Trump join her in some Hillary bashing

TOO CLOSE FOR COMFORT? Other Republicans have blasted Donald Trump (pictured) for his seemingly cozy relationship with Hillary and Bill Clinton
TOO CLOSE FOR COMFORT? Other Republicans have blasted Donald Trump for his seemingly cozy relationship with Hillary (pictured) and Bill Clinton

TOO CLOSE FOR COMFORT? Other Republicans have blasted Donald Trump (left) for his seemingly cozy relationship with Hillary (right) and Bill Clinton

Fiorina has fired on Clinton since joining the race and her words on Monday were just as tough.

'Mrs. Clinton is the same person who compared Republicans to terrorists,' the former tech CEO blasted.

'The truth is Mrs. Clinton has lied as secretary of state, about Benghazi, about her emails, about her server,' she added.

Meanwhile, Trump has miffed the Republican establishment by focusing his fire on Jeb Bush instead of on Clinton.

While President Obama is often made fun of for using a teleprompter, Donald Trump tried to use the same line of attack on Hillary Clinton over the weekend  

While President Obama is often made fun of for using a teleprompter, Donald Trump tried to use the same line of attack on Hillary Clinton over the weekend  

Hillary Clinton said that Donald Trump 'insults and dismisses women,' to which Donald Trump replied that her speech was kind of lame

Hillary Clinton said that Donald Trump 'insults and dismisses women,' to which Donald Trump replied that her speech was kind of lame

Last week alone, Trump called the former GOP frontrunner 'sad' and a 'low-energy' candidate.

He tsk-tsked the bilingual Bush for answering a Latino reporter's questions in Spanish, as Bush tried to drum up votes from Hispanics by speaking their language.

On Clinton, Trump has less memorably and more bizarrely tweeted critically about the Democrat's use of a teleprompter – a line of attack usually saved for President Obama – and also called Clinton's attacks on him emotionless. 

Clinton had said that Trump 'insults and dismisses women.'

Beyond those barbs, Trump has become better-known for his connections to Bill and Hillary, not for opposing them.

During the August 6 Republican primary debate in Cleveland, rival White House hopeful Rand Paul alluded to the Clintons' attendance at Trump's 2005 wedding to Melania Knauss.

'I mean, this is what’s wrong. He buys and sells politicians of all stripes,' Paul said. 'He’s already hedging his bet on the Clintons, OK?'

'So if he doesn’t run as a Republican, maybe he supports Clinton, or maybe he runs as an independent.' 

Trump answered criticisms like Paul's by pledging on Sept. 3 that he will back the winner of the GOP contest, whoever it is.

Trump swatted back, explaining that as a businessman he was only working the system. 

'When they call, I give,' Trump explained. 'And you know what? When I need something from them two years later, three years later, I call them. They are there for me.'

Trump has repeatedly argued that since he is financing his own campaign, his loyalty as America's chief executive wouldn't be split between the nation's interests and those of his contributors.

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