GOP Rep. to Trump: McCain, Flake are ‘your team’
She said President Trump strongly feels that a lot of that can be done through growing the economy, creating better jobs, and helping people have a better life.
“Phoenix crowd last night was incredible – a packed house”. “I really think they don’t like our country, I really believe that”. Jeff Flake. “He’s weak on borders and weak on crime”.
McCain was one of three GOP senators who voted against the repeal bill. Jeff Flake said Wednesday that President Donald Trump is inviting a primary challenge in 2020 with his style of governing. “And now, see, I haven’t mentioned any names, so now everybody’s happy”. Nobody knows who the hell he is. A visibly agitated Trump trotted out a few of his dusty one-liners from the campaign, before moving on, inexplicably, to recounting almost verbatim his remarks day-by-day in the aftermath of the Charlottesville.
In anticipation of Trump’s first trip to Arizona after winning the White House and his first to the West amid criticism for his remarks, the political world was abuzz with not just whether Trump would set off controversy in Phoenix – but which specific hot-button clash he could wade into.
“I wish the senator would understand: If he’s got a difference with the president, take it to him, but do it in private”, he continued.
“I got the white supremacist, I got the neo-Nazi, I got ’em all in there”.
“I find this downright scary and disturbing”, Clapper said.
The president riled up the crowd by blaming the media for reporting on his much-criticized response to the violence, even reading directly from his original statement regarding Charlottesville in an attempt to show he denounced it early.
Trump also launched a series of verbal grenades at the media who were there covering his rally, which drew thousands on a day that hit 107 degrees outside. He also called journalists “truly dishonest people” who “don’t like our country”.
Sixty percent of people said that they disapprove of the president’s response to the recent violence in Charlottesville, while 32 percent approve. The only people giving a platform to hate, ‘ Trump said.
A reporter covering the rally spotted a Trump supporter outside the arena yelling, “McCain needs to die now!”
As the president talks of campaign promises, the United Nations speaks up on racism in USPHOENIX/GENEVA US President Donald Trump lashed out at the media for the condemnation of his response to violence at the Charlottesville protest organised by white supremacists, during a rally held in Phoenix, Arizona on Tuesday. Trump spoke broadly about “liberating our towns” from undocumented immigrants, citing Joe Arpaio, pledging to purge “sanctuary cities” of undocumented immigrants and leading the crowd in a “build the wall” chant.