US Presidential candidate Donald Trump could be banned from visiting UK PHOTO
Prime Minister David Cameron was responding to a question from an opposition lawmaker on whether he would use anti-extremism legislation to block Trump from visiting the UK, in line with growing calls to do so following Trump’s proposal to ban Muslims from entering the United States.
The poll was conducted in the wake of a proposal made by U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump, the Republican Party frontrunner, on December 7.
“They go back to their audience and they [say] see that’s what we have been telling you and this is war against you, this is war against your faith so join our hands, radicalize, and believe in that extremism”.
Trump called for the temporary ban earlier this week after a Muslim husband and wife killed 14 people in a shooting rampage in California that has been classified as a terrorist act.
“I happen to disagree with you about Donald Trump”.
“I assume his remarks are divisive, silly and flawed and I assume if he got here to go to our nation, he’d unite us all towards him”, Cameron stated when requested within the House of Commons whether or not he supported a petition to ban Trump from getting into Britain.
Meanwhile, Trump suffered one other setback within the United Kingdom when his authorized problem to a deliberate offshore wind farm was rejected by the UK’s Supreme Court.
Trump said, “We can’t allow radical killers into this country”.
American security has become a key talking point on the campaign trail for those looking to succeed President Barack Obama in 2016. “Does the Prime Minister agree that the law should be applied equally to everyone, or should we be making exceptions for billionaire politicians?”
A Scottish Government spokeswoman said: ‘Mr Trump’s recent remarks have shown that he is no longer fit to be a business ambassador for Scotland and the First Minister has decided his membership of the respected GlobalScot business network should be withdrawn with immediate effect’.
In a second statement from the Trump Organization, a representative labeled Salmond, who was the leader of Scotland’s parliament until last past year, as “a has-been and totally irrelevant”.
“The university has therefore chose to revoke its award of the honorary degree”, said a spokesman for the university.