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US isn’t an ‘only-for-white Americans sort of country’
As FiveThirtyEight notes, Trump is “polling worse among black voters than nearly every single Republican presidential nominee since 1948 in polls taken between the party conventions and Election Day”.
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It’s still undecided whether Donald Trump will continue to support forced deportation of millions of undocumented immigrants living in the USA, his campaign manager said Sunday.
That’s a huge switch from Trump’s longstanding promises to build a wall along the Southern border and kick the undocumented immigrants already living here out with a “deportation force”.
Clinton has led Trump in the poll throughout most of the 2016 campaign, and has maintained her advantage following last month’s Republican and Democratic conventions.
Donald Trump’s hardline stance and harsh rhetoric on the issue of illegal immigration may be shifting, as comments by his new campaign manager and a report from sources inside a meeting of his Hispanic advisers suggest the Republican candidate for president may be backing away from his calls to deport the millions of people who are in the country illegally.
Republican Senator Jeff Sessions, a close ally of Mr Trump, told CBS Mr Trump was still working through his plans for deportations should he win the White House.
“He’s wrestling with how to do that”.
“We have at least 11 million people in this country that came in illegally”, he said. Mook insisted that Manafort’s removal wasn’t enough, and that Trump needed to explain just how much Russian Federation has run his campaign. Trump and his aides have also been unclear on whether he still wants to temporarily bar most foreign Muslims from entering the country.
Donald Trump’s campaign expenses more than doubled last month, even as the Republican presidential nominee held his payroll to about 70 employees, aired no television advertisements and undertook no significant.
Trump brought Conway and Breitbart News’ Steve Bannon in to run the campaign amid declining poll numbers and a controversy over former campaign chair Paul Manafort’s ties to Ukraine’s former regime.
Donald Trump met with his newly-minted Hispanic advisory board in New York Saturday, sitting down with elected officials, business leaders and faith leaders, along with his new campaign team.
Mr Trump’s support has slumped in national polls in recent weeks and surveys in pivotal states such as Pennsylvania and New Hampshire have shown a widening lead for Mrs Clinton.
Clinton’s campaign raised $63 million in July, on top of $26 million for two joint funds with the Democratic Party and almost $10 million raised by her friendly super PAC, according to new Federal Election Commission filings.
A Trump spokesman, Steven Cheung, said the candidate’s immigration position hasn’t changed.
And questions about Trump’s immigration plan come as the nominee trails far behind his opponent, Hillary Clinton, among Latinos.
On Tuesday and Wednesday, Donald Trump will head to events in Texas and MS, respectively – states that no Republican has lost since 1976.
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The Morning Consult survey, which tested the ceiling of support for the presidential candidates, showed that 50% of respondents would not consider Trump to succeed Barack Obama, while 45% said they would definitely not back Hillary Clinton.