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Donald Trump supporters struggle to speak for and defend Republican nominee
It would also expose users’ contact data to any breach of the Trump campaign’s systems, which were recently compromised.
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Across the Sunday news shows, a parade of Trump stand-ins, led by vice presidential nominee Mike Pence, couldn’t say whether Trump was sticking with or changing a central promise to boot the roughly 11 million people living in the USA illegally, with the help of a “deportation force”. She said the foundation’s charitable programs has been “in line with American interests and values” and must continue, perhaps through partnerships with other organizations.
Former New York City mayor and Trump surrogate Rudy Giuliani encouraged doubters to “go online and put down ‘Hillary Clinton illness'”.
The van carrying Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton departs an Federal Bureau of Investigation office in White Plains, N.Y., Saturday, Aug. 27, 2016, after attending a national security briefing.
However, Trump has appearned in recent weeks to search for a less severe approach, knowing that he’ll need some support from Hispanic and other minority voters to win the general election race against Clinton, the Democratic presidential nominee.
“There is a very good chance the answer could be yes”, Trump said when asked if he would deport those who have lived here peacefully but without papers.
The candidates were both viewed unfavorably by the voters as is the case in the polls, with Trump getting 58 percent this time and Clinton 57 percent in the survey taken from August 24 to August 26.
On Sunday night, Trump tweeted that he will be making a speech on illegal immigration on Wednesday in Arizona.
Trump running mate Mike Pence gave the GOP nominee some wiggle room on actually implementing that deportation force in an interview with CNN’s Jake Tapper on “State of the Union” Sunday, downplaying it as merely a “mechanism” to carry out Trump’s bigger-picture ideas.
“The real issue is look at the two plans”, Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus told NBC’s “Meet the Press“. “But now he’s reflecting on it and his position is going to be known”, Priebus said. That’s what CBS’ John Dickerson asked Trump campaign manager Kellyanne Conway on Sunday.
“It does really bother me”, he said.
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“Well, I think the whole question of anchor babies, as it’s known, the whole question of citizenship, of natural-born Americans is a subject for the future”, he said. “In this task, we will always err on the side of protecting the American people – we will use immigration law to prevent crimes, and will not wait until some innocent American has been harmed or killed before taking action”.