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Trump puts off Israel trip ‘until I am president’

A new poll found that two-thirds of American voters (64%) are either concerned about or afraid of a potential Donald Trump presidency-and that almost as many (57%) are concerned about or frightened of a potential Hillary Clinton presidency.

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United States presidential candidates often visit Israel as part of efforts to appeal to Jewish voters and donors back home and boost their foreign policy credentials.

“I really think he needs somebody to calm him down, you know”.

That breaks from an online Bloomberg Politics/Purple Strategies poll released yesterday that reported 65 percent of Republicans showing support for Trump’s ban. “Who said the shameful, dangerous, and extreme quote: Donald Trump or another Republican?”

Retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson came in second among Republicans with 12 percent in the Reuters/Ipsos poll, and U.S. Senator Ted Cruz of Texas and former Florida Governor Jeb Bush tied with 10 percent. The letter, drafted by MP Michal Rozin, and mainly signed by opposition lawmakers, said that, “while leaders around the world condemn the Republican presidential candidate’s racist and outrageous remarks, Netanyahu is warmly embracing him” and any meeting would “disgrace Israel’s democratic character and hurt its Muslim citizens”. A Dubai firm building a $6 billion golf complex stripped Trump’s name from the property. But, as he discusses with the former Secretary of State, Trump’s rhetoric as of late is becoming increasingly unsafe to the point that it’s no longer a laughing matter. Fully 54% of Republicans agreed with Trump, while 38% disagreed. Netanyahu criticized Trump, and Trump can’t attack him.

Mr Netanyahu’s office had said on Wednesday that he rejects Mr Trump’s comments about Muslims but planned to move forward with the meeting.

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“If they – Nicola Sturgeon and RGU – were going to do this, they should have informed me prior to my major investment in this £200 million development, which will totally revitalise that vast region of Scotland”.

To treat GOP presidential hopeful Donald Trump’s “no Muslims allowed” as a serious idea is to give credit to what is little more than a clever stunt by a man who saw Ted Cruz beating him for the first time in the Iowa Monmouth poll and decided it