Donald Trump isn’t backing away from immigrant comments
The Republican candidate’s statement said that the decision was due to the ongoing controversy over his harsh rhetoric against illegal immigration. The tweet also caused Trump to lose his business dealings with Macy’s, NBC and Univision, reports Time.
“The worst elements in Mexico are being pushed into the United States by the Mexican government”, Trump said in a lengthy statement released yesterday afternoon, which began with a verbatim reprint of a speech he gave last week where he said Mexicans are “bringing drugs”.
Trump also came under fire Monday for retweeting a message from a Twitter user that suggested former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush “has to like the Mexican illegals because of his wife”.
“I’ve said very clearly that Donald Trump does not represent the Republican Party”, said Perry, a ex- Texas governor, in an interview that aired on ABC’s This Week on Sunday, according to a network transcript.
The same alleged rapists and drug dealers Trump wants to keep out of the USA with a literal giant wall say they’re risking their lives daily by installing windows on high floors of his new hotel and working with toxic chemicals. In short: It’s not rapists who threaten our country’s integrity; it’s their victims. They’re sending people that have lots of problems, and they’re bringing those problems with us.
At his Manchester campaign headquarters, Pataki laid out what he calls are “practical” policy solutions for the issue of securing the southern US border, as well as what to do with the millions of illegal immigrants already living in the country.
This all comes in the wake of his controversial remarks over Hispanic immigrants, saying, “When Mexico sends its people. They’re rapists”. “Trump is wrong on this”. “He’s getting attention because he’s putting all the other candidates on the spot”.
“The media is always quick to point out that Trump is a Republican – or says he is – so people who hear him talking think the GOP hates Mexico, and therefor Hispanics”.
The annual charity outing benefits The V Foundation’s Stuart Scott Memorial Cancer Research Fund, which is named for the late ESPN anchor who passed away earlier this year, and provides resources for important cancer research for minority populations, including both Latinos and African-Americans.