Clinton giving ‘ambitious new goals’ on economy
“Very, very unfair, and very very bad for our country”, Trump said of Clinton.
Trump made a direct appeal to supporters of Clinton’s primary rival Bernie Sanders, urging them to help him fix a “rigged system”. “So, yes, I agree with what Donald Trump said and I think most evangelicals would as well”.
Mr Trump also repeated accusations Mrs Clinton’s decisions as America’s top diplomat were influenced by donations to her family’s Clinton Foundation and associated charities. “All of the money she’s raising, it’s blood money, it’s blood money”.
Tensions between Donald Trump’s campaign manager Corey Lewandowski and Jewish son-in-law Jared Kushner reportedly were behind Lewandowski’s departure announced Monday by the campaign. “Make sure my business is being taken care of'”.
Trump has been tying Clinton to President Obama’s economic record, saying “Obama-Clinton inherited $10T in debt and turned it into almost $20T” and that food stamp usage has soared under their leadership.
When it comes to the economy, Donald Trump is the preferred choice of American voters.
“In short, Hillary Clinton’s tryout for the presidency has produced one deadly foreign policy disaster after another, and one by one they’re all bad”, Trump said.
On the other hand, Americans’ views of Trump began to worsen in the final weeks of May and have continued to slip since.
The presumptive Republican presidential nominee’s speech quickly moved from railing against the establishment-a pillar of his outsider run for president-to railing against Clinton’s record in public service.
“The evangelical vote was mostly gotten by me”, he said. Nearly half (48 percent) said they support a ban, 40 percent said they oppose and 11 percent said they didn’t know or had no opinion.
“This election will decide whether we’re ruled by the people or the politicians” he said. “He’s proud of it”.
O’Donnell politely refrained from noting that Trump and Clinton are not “even.”
But it wasn’t the issue that Clinton focused on in her speech.
If Clinton won the presidency, the survey found 47 percent of people would feel hopeful, 46 percent would feel afraid, 39 percent would feel embarrassed, 35 percent would feel proud and 29 percent would feel excited.
Mr Trump’s remarks came one day after Mrs Clinton launched her own blistering attacks on her White House rival.
The backstop against those fears is Trump’s personal wealth – although his refusal to release his tax returns has some questioning whether he’s as rich as he claims.
Trump allies cast Lewandowski’s firing this week as the start of a new phase for the campaign.
Late Tuesday afternoon, Trump sent out the first-ever fundraising email of his campaign.
Adding to concerns over Trump’s recent statements targeting a USA federal judge and his response to the mass shooting in Orlando, Florida, many Republican officials have said the Trump campaign has not built the vital state-level operations needed to win an election.