The two candidates vying to become Britain's next prime minister both condemned on Monday US President Donald Trump's xenophobic tweets about progressive Democrat congresswomen as "totally offensive" and "totally unacceptable".
But front-runner Boris Johnson and Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt refused to call the tweets racist when pressed to do so during their last debate before next week's announcement of who will succeed Prime Minister Theresa May.
May's spokesman had earlier said that the outgoing leader's view was that Trump's comments were "completely unacceptable".
On Monday Trump doubled down on a series of his tweets from the day before urging the four congresswomen of colour to "go back" to the countries they came from.
"If you're not happy here, you can leave," Trump told reporters at the White House. Johnson said the original tweets expressed sentiments "that went out decades and decades ago".
"I think the relations between the UK and US are incredibly important," said Johnson.
"But if you are the leader of a great multiracial, multicultural society, you simply cannot use that kind of language about sending people back where they came from," Johnson said. "It's totally unacceptable and I agree with the prime minister."
Pressed by the moderator to call Trump's tweets racist, Johnson said: "I've said what I said."
"If anyone said to them, go back to China, I would be utterly appalled," Hunt said. "It is totally un-British to say that."
"I can understand how many people of this country would want me to use those words, and would feel that sentiment," he added. "But I hope I have made absolutely clear how totally offensive it is to me that people are still saying that kind of thing."
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