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Hillary Clinton attacks Trump’s appearance with Nigel Farage
Though Farage did not actually endorse Trump at the event, he said he would not vote Clinton “if she paid me” and told the audience: “Anything is possible if enough decent people are prepared to stand up against the establishment”.
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Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump on Thursday proclaimed himself the new “Mister Brexit”, one day after appearing at a USA campaign rally with Nigel Farage, an ultra-rightist politician who headed the campaign in the United Kingdom for that country to leave the European Union. There are millions of ordinary Americans who feel let down.
Trump called Farage’s appearance an honour and said: “The nation’s working people will take control again”.
Trump faces many challenges in his general election campaign against Hillary Clinton, but he has held an edge over the Democratic standard bearer as the candidate who can bring “change” to Washington.
The Democratic nominee later suggested that Farage and Russian President Vladimir Putin were linked to each other. He told Trump supporters to “get your walking boots on” and campaign for the controversial billionaire to clinch the upcoming November US election.
If you Kippers play with fire you’re going to get burned. She claimed that Farage had “stoked anti-immigrant sentiments” as part of the Leave campaign, which lead to a successful Brexit vote during the country’s European Union referendum.
Donald Trump is linking his “movement to take back the country” to Britain’s surprising vote to leave the European Union.
In June, right after the United Kingdom upset the conventional wisdom and narrowly voted in favor of Brexit, Ballotpedia examined whether the anti-establishment sentiment that helped fuel Farage’s effort could impact the USA presidential election and work to Trump’s benefit.
Trump, who defeated 16 rivals for the Republican presidential nomination partly based on his opposition to illegal immigrants, said he would not allow for the granting of American citizenship to the undocumented population and that he would expel those who break the law.
To be eligible to stay in the United States, Trump said, illegal immigrants would have to pay back taxes.
And earlier in August he declared ‘They will soon be calling me Mr. Brexit!’
“But when I go through and I meet thousands and thousands of people on this subject, and I’ve had very strong people come up to me. and they’ve said: ‘Mr”.
Mr Trump said his rival’s speech was a “brazen” bid to distract from questions about her family foundation and private e-mails.
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Trump’s new position seemed to bare a resemblance in some ways to the failed 2007 reform push by former Republican President George W. Bush.