Gloves Off: Ted Cruz Accuses Donald Trump Of Being Pro-‘Amnesty’
But nothing has stopped Mr Trump from seizing control of the race and being in position to win not only Iowa’s caucuses on Feb 1 but also New Hampshire’s first-in-the-nation primary on Feb 9. “I think America would be in trouble if any of them got to be president of the United States”.
With just over a week until the Iowa caucuses, members of the Republican Establishment are beginning to begrudgingly take sides between the two Republican frontrunners, Donald Trump and Ted Cruz.
The big news came as the Iowa governor was speaking to a small group of reporters at the Iowa Renewable Fuels Summit in Altoona, where several 2016 presidential candidates are slated to speak, Branstad labeled Cruz a “big oil” candidate whose victory would be “very damaging to our state”.
“I can’t have it both ways”, Graham said.
The statement from Trump’s campain also highlighted Palin’s “fiscally modest” history and pro-life stance.
This support can be interpreted as the beginning of the formation of a front against the traditional Republican candidacy and the seemingly unstoppable rise of the real estate magnate Donald Trump and Texas Senator Ted Cruz.
Trump? Trying to brush it off. “It’s a dying paper”. Today has the Washington Post former mayor Rudy Giuliani and New York Representative Peter King on the record siding with Trump over Ted Cruz, who is intensely disliked by many Republicans who have worked with him in Congress, where he championed the government shutdown in 2013 and has excoriated his own Senate leadership.
During his interview, Donald Trump said that he will reverse the Delayed Action on Childhood Arrivals before it reaches the Supreme Court. The results showed Trump with a comfortable lead over Cruz, 35 percent to 15 percent.
At the awards ceremony, held in conjunction with a gun show, Trump reiterated his support for the Second Amendment – a topic that has been a constant refrain at his rallies and often draws loud applause.
If anything, the most visible signs of support for Trump’s campaign in recent days have come from those who see themselves as outside the Republican establishment. Back in March 2015, only 23% of Republican voters said they would support Trump in a general election. “I’m actually surprised”, he added. “We the people will get him in office if we push hard”.
Kathleen King, chair of the Manatee County Republican Party since 2006, said the campaigns for former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and state Sen.
The spot cuts to a Fox News interview where Trump says he thinks “eminent domain is wonderful”.