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Cruz Surges in Iowa Poll After Paris Attacks

The Super PAC planning the attack is New Day for America, which is supporting Ohio Governor John Kasich’s presidential bid.

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The theoretical wins over Mrs. Clinton ranged from an 8-point spread for Sen.

Ben Carson, who endorsed Trump’s bogus claim before changing his mind a few hours later, is also trying to blame news organizations. Ted Cruz of Texas. “If they break that agreement with him, as they say, ‘woe be on them'”.

None of the other GOP contenders broke double digits.

Terrorism topped the list of voter concerns with 24 percent, followed by the economy at 21 percent.

Right Wing Watch posted the audio of Lewandowski’s comments, in which he pretends fiction is fact.

A new Iowa poll puts Sen. “I think if it had happened, I would remember it, but, you know, there could be things I forget, too”.

“I heard you wanted us to start wearing ID badges, so I decided to choose one for myself”, she told Mr Trump in her Facebook post.

During a rally on Saturday, Donald Trump became the first Republican candidate to insist that “thousands and thousands” of American Muslims in New Jersey celebrated the destruction of the World Trade Center.

“What we were talking about is the reaction of Muslims after the 9/11 attack, and if they were in a celebratory mood”.

“Businessman Donald Trump and neurosurgeon Ben Carson lead on the outsider track, and Sens”. But he had a slower favorability and higher unfavorable rating than candidates like Carson, Cruz and Rubio, and his net favorability stands at just 26 now. Trump was asked about that Sunday morning on ABC News’ This Week. Other candidates, namely Carson and Ted Cruz, are taking note and following his lead in singling out Muslims for criticism. Carson and Paul are at 6 percent each.

“The recent attacks in Paris remind us that our country is in need more than ever of a leader who is qualified and experienced to understand and lead our military”, said Tom Moe, who was a prisoner of war with Sen.

In an interview with Yahoo News, Mr Trump suggested he would consider a series of drastic measures in his push for increased surveillance of American Muslims.

“I would say we use our intelligence and we monitor anything: our mosques, a church, a museum, a supermarket”, he said, later adding that monitoring would come after multiple reports or indications of radical activity.

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Most of Trump’s support in Iowa seems to come from name recognition, and according to the Quinnipiac poll, many of his supporters self-identify as moderate, possibly making them part of the low-information voter pool most Republicans worry about – a win for the coalition, but an unreliable crowd for turnout.

Scott Morgan  Reuters