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Disarm Clinton’s bodyguards and see what happens to her, Trump says
“I think that her bodyguards should drop all weapons”.
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“I was pretty confident about where I was born”, he said. I think they should disarm. Immediately. What do you think? Yes? Yes. Take their. and let’s see what happens to her. He had also slammed her for accepting armed Secret Service protection while backing gun control measures in the country. He then added, “let’s see what happens to her”. “It’ll be very unsafe”, the New York Times quoted the Manhattan billionaire as saying.
Trump made a similar comment about Clinton and her armed protection in May while accepting the endorsement of the National Rifle Association, when he said Clinton would end the U.S. constitution’s second amendment, which guarantees the right to bear arms. In an address to the National Rifle Association in May, for instance, the real estate mogul said that “heartless hypocrites like the Clintons. want to get rid of guns, and yet they have bodyguards that have guns”.
The US first lady and wife of President Barack Obama, who won the White House in 2008 and 2012 with high levels of support from young voters, told a crowd of students in Virginia that they could mean the difference between a Clinton win or a loss to Republican nominee Donald Trump.
Clinton campaign manager Robby Mook said Trump’s comments in Miami fit a disturbing pattern of encouraging violence.
Donald Trump publicly retreated from his “birther” campaign Friday, tersely acknowledging that President Barack Obama was born in the United States and saying that he wanted to move on from the conspiracy theory that he has been clinging to for years. Kaine said. “And when you look at a series of these comments that he’s making, I do believe it is an (incitement) – or at a minimum, an expression of indifference to whether violence would occur”. And the Clinton campaign was quick to condemn the candidate’s remarks.
Mr Trump had just completed a few days of relative discipline – he resisted the temptation, for instance, to denigrate Ms Clinton for taking days off the trail to recover from pneumonia – that many observers had put down to the influence of his new campaign chief, Kellyanne Conway. Democratic Presidential candidate Hillary Clinton blamed Trump for not saying that the President was born in the United States.
The Secret Service has declined to comment on Trump’s Friday night remark, spokeswoman Catherine Milhoan said.
Her statement that she would bring 186,740 new jobs to Wisconsin while Trump would cost the state 61,050 jobs was rated half-true.
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Clinton herself denied that she’s rallying for the second amendment’s abolition if she gets elected.