Hillary Clinton tells Seth Meyers Donald Trump is no longer amusing
The Israeli leader, widely seen as a supporter of the Republican Party, shares much in common with Trump.
Bloomberg found that 64 per cent of likely Republican primary voters support the ban, compared to 35 per cent overall and 17 per cent among Democrats.
“You know, I have to say, Seth, I no longer think he is amusing”, Ms Clinton said, according to NBC News.
Ohio Gov. John Kasich said Wednesday that banning Muslims “doesn’t represent what we are” and would weaken the country.
Hillary Clinton has a message for Donald Trump after he publicly stated that we need to close our borders to all Muslims.
“Donald Trump, it has come to our attention that you want to ban all Muslims [from entering] the United States”.
The leading Republican presidential contender, who prompted outrage around the world on Monday by calling for Muslims to be barred from entering the USA following the San Bernardino shooting, also praised controversial British commentator Katie Hopkins after she supported his position in an interview on Fox News.
“The situation in Israel is particularly volatile, and so I think in this case his decision to reconsider that trip is a good outcome for all those involved”, Earnest told reporters. “The more Muslims feel sad, the more ISIS feels they can recruit them…You have been warned, Mr. Donald Trump”.
“We’ve had a pretty interesting couple of days”, said Trump. A fair reading of the exchange with Trump showed his comments to be more about immigration, which is … a redundancy, since the government has records (a database) of all people entering the U.S. legally anyway. That surprising formula is fuelling the businessman’s rise to the top of the Republican presidential pack, according to recent surveys. He had more than double the support of his nearest rivals in the online poll of 481 Republicans. Marco Rubio 52 percent and former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush 42.
Trump’s die-hard supporters – Who are the thousands of people standing behind their man, through thick and thin?
In the new national survey, three-quarters of Republicans said Trump would have a chance of winning the general election if nominated, significantly more than said so of any other GOP candidate.