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Republicans rally with Barack Obama against Donald Trump’s remarks

The incumbent has often dismissed Trump as a buffoon, but never openly attacked his ideas or his language.

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Obama says the USA was founded on freedom of religion and that there are no religious tests in America.

Many legal experts said Mr Trump’s proposal for a religion-based ban would be unlikely to pass the test of U.S. constitutional guarantees and would likely be struck down by the courts if he tried to implement them by presidential decree.

Trump dismissed Obama’s remarks by saying the president “sounded more angry at me than he was at the [Orlando] shooter”. A ban on Muslims would not have stopped this attack.

“If I were Trump, I would go on the offense in an effective way and say that the reason the war on terror is going so badly is because this president has allowed our capabilities to defend the nation to deteriorate”. “When I am president, it will always be America first”. He continued to explain, “It doesn’t reflect our democratic ideals”. He also said he thinks women do not like the former Secretary of State. It’s not fear. We have to be respected. “We have seen our government mistreat our fellow citizens, and it has been a shameful part of our history”, he said.

“Where does this stop?” “It’s just more evidence that he is temperamentally unfit and totally unqualified to be commander-in-chief”, Clinton said, noting that building trust in Muslim-American communities was key to countering the self-radicalization of men like Mateen. “We’re going to agree to disagree on some things”, Ryan replied. Are we going to start discriminating against them due to their faith?

Barron’s campaign on Trump’s behalf will be an uphill battle, as polling shows that most LGBT voters remain skeptical of Republicans, whose officials party platform opposes same-sex marriage. “We need leadership and concrete plans because we are facing a brutal enemy”.

House Speaker Paul Ryan said Thursday he will continue to speak out in defense of conservative principles, despite a warning from Donald Trump that Republican congressional leaders should “be quiet”.

The poll, conducted from Friday to Tuesday (June 11 to June 14), showed Clinton with an 11.6-point lead – 44.6 percent to 33.0 percent – over Trump, down from the 13-point lead she had just days earlier. “We will lose our freedoms in this country, including all of the Bill of Rights, if we don’t robustly defend the separation of powers”.

Ryan also commented on Trump’s repeal of the Washington Post’s press credentials at Trump events, saying Trump is “a different kind of candidate”.

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“Islamic terrorism problem”, he said.

All the new polls tell the same story: Trump is in trouble