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Trump hit for letting man call Obama a Muslim

Donald Trump spoke at a town hall event Thursday in Rochester, N.H. Robert F. Bukaty/AP

ROCHESTER, N.H. — Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump drew fire from Democrats and some Republicans on Friday after declining to rebuke a questioner at a town hall event who insulted Muslims and wrongly said President Obama is a member of the faith.

‘‘He knew, or he should have known, that what that man was asking was not only way out of bounds, it was untrue,’’ said Hillary Clinton, the Democratic front-runner, after a campaign event in New Hampshire. ‘‘He should have from the beginning repudiated that kind of rhetoric, that level of hatefulness.’’

The question to Trump came Thursday night at a town hall in Rochester, N.H.

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The first person the billionaire real estate mogul called on said, ‘‘We have a problem in this country. It’s called Muslims.’’

‘‘We know our current president is one,’’ the man said of Obama, who is Christian. ‘‘You know he’s not even an American.’’

Trump, a driver of the ‘‘birther’’ movement that falsely claimed Obama was born outside the United States, first responded with feigned exasperation — ‘‘We need the question,’’ he said, to laughs — before letting the man continue.

‘‘We have training camps growing where they want to kill us. That’s my question,’’ the man in the audience continued. ‘‘When can we get rid of it?’’

Trump did not dispute the man’s assertion that militants operate training camps on American soil and said he had heard others raise the issue.

‘‘We’re going to be looking at a lot of different things. And you know, a lot of people are saying that, and a lot of people are saying that bad things are happening out there,’’ said Trump. ‘‘We’re going to be looking at that and plenty of other things.’’

At the White House, press secretary Josh Earnest said Friday it was unfortunate that Trump ‘‘wasn’t able to summon the same kind of patriotism’’ that Republican Senator John McCain showed in 2008, when he took the microphone away from a woman who said she didn’t trust Obama because he was Arab.

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‘‘Mr. Trump isn’t the first Republican politician to countenance these kind of views in order to win votes,’’ Earnest said. ‘‘That’s precisely what every Republican presidential candidate is doing when they decline to denounce Mr. Trump’s cynical strategy.’’

But Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina was happy to criticize Trump, saying via Twitter, ‘‘There is a right way to handle these situations and a wrong way to handle these situations, Donald.’’

Graham tweeted a link to a story about how he condemned a racist comment during a political event earlier this year in Iowa, and then beat the man who made it in a game of pool.

Governor Chris Christie of New Jersey said that ‘‘if somebody at one of my town meetings said something like that, I would correct him.’’

But Christie, appearing Friday on NBC’s ‘‘Today’’ show, also said it is up to Trump to decide how to handle such situations, adding, ‘‘I’m not going to lecture him about what to do.’’