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No formal Secret Service discussions with Trump camp on remark
James Rohrscheib, 74, a registered Republican and retired US Navy officer from Washington state, told Reuters the reality is the November 8 election will be a “tough one”.
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“The big part of the rigged system is the press itself because they can take a little story that isn’t a story and make it into a big deal, it happens so much”, he said. This is a 9-point increase from the last poll released Monday.
Among all registered voters, some 44 per cent want Trump to drop out. That is based on a survey of 1,162 registered voters, with a margin of error of three percentage points.
In Fayetteville, N.C., Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump spoke mainly about the economy. “My temperament’s going to win for us”. -Mexican border and temporarily banning Muslims from entering the country.
Supporters of Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump listen during a campaign rally, Wednesday, Aug. 10, 2016, in Abingdon, Va. “And this year, they will be voting in record numbers, and it won’t be for Hillary Clinton, it will be for Donald Trump”.
Trump’s supporters in Fayetteville seemed unconcerned about the controversy.
The US Secret Service, which investigates threats against sitting presidents and party nominees, has had “more than one conversation” with the Trump campaign about his remark, CNN reported on Wednesday.
Donald Trump’s suggestion that gun rights activists could stop his Democratic opponent from curtailing their right to bear firearms proves he does not have the temperament to be U.S. president, Hillary Clinton said last night.
Napolitano weighed in on Donald Trump’s comments about “Second Amendment people” and Secretary Clinton. The U.S. Constitution’s Second Amendment guarantees a right to keep and bear arms.
Megan MacDonald, 25, is a Republican but did not support Trump through the primary.
“Anybody who says to me well you know we can’t really transition to clean renewable energy, I ask them “have you been to Iowa lately?” she asked”.
“This is simple – what Trump is saying is unsafe”.
Trump has dismissed the defections and criticism as an unsurprising reaction of the so-called Washington elite to his drive to change the status quo.
“People are grasping at straws”, Ron Bonjean, a Republican strategist unaffiliated with Mr Trump said.
“He’s kind of like a 7th grade bully, but I think that’s not fair to 7th grade bullies”, he said. “I would actually say the media is nearly as crooked as “Crooked” Hillary Clinton”.
Almost 63 per cent have an unfavorable view of Trump.
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Clinton referred to Trump’s comments as the “latest in a long line” of comments that “crossed the line”, pointing to his history of “casual cruelty” towards others.