Showing posts with label Campaign. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Campaign. Show all posts

Tuesday, 13 September 2016

Fresh violence at Trump rally as supporter allegedly punches protester


A Donald Trump campaign rally was marred by violence yet again on Monday as the Republican nominee attacked Hillary Clinton for calling his supporters deplorable.
A Trump supporter apparently punched a protester at a rally held at the US Cellular Center in Asheville, North Carolina. The scuffle was the first violent incident at a Trump rally in months. Although throughout the primary season, Trump campaign events had been marked by violence by both Trump supporters and protesters, culminating in near riots in Chicago and San Jose, California, they had been comparatively peaceful in recent months. Prior to being punched, the protester reportedly directed an obscene gesture in Trump’s direction.
The incident happened as Trump attempted to attack Clinton for her statement that half of his supporters belong in “a basket of deplorables”. Although the former secretary of state has since backed down from the comment, she has continued to insist her opponent has “built his campaign largely on prejudice and paranoia and given a national platform to hateful views and voices”.
Trump has tried to paint this as an attack by Clinton on blue-collar Americans. “Hillary Clinton spoke with hatred in her heart for these working-class Americans,” he said in Asheville on Monday night, in an effort to reinforce his attacks on his opponent as an insider member of the Beltway elite. The Republican nominee went on to repeat of Clinton: “She talks about people like they are objects, not human beings.”
The attacks come as Clinton has been forced off the campaign trail for health reasons. The Democratic nominee was forced to cancel a campaign trip to California after being filmed losing her footing while abruptly leaving a ceremony to commemorate the terrorist attacks of September 11 on Sunday. Eventually, after initially claiming that she was “overheated”, the Clinton campaign admitted that the candidate had been diagnosed with pneumonia on Friday. 
In a phone interview with CNN’s Anderson Cooper on Monday night, Clinton said she was feeling better and insisted that she did not faint on Sunday. The Democratic nominee said “we know the least about Donald Trump than any candidate in recent American history” and that he should be held to “the same standard” as any other candidate.
She noted the only medical information released by Trump was a letter addressed “to whom my concern” that proclaimed, if elected, Trump would be “the healthiest individual ever elected to the presidency”. Clinton said “that’s not even serious” and went on to hammer Trump for refusing to release his tax returns.
Trump, who has long made jibes about Clinton’s “stamina”, did not address his rival’s illness on Monday night. Earlier in the day he had said he hoped she got better soon but added that her illness was “an issue
Instead, he continued his offensive against his opponent by claiming that she was running a pessimistic campaign of scare tactics. “Our vision of hope stands in stark contrast to my opponent’s campaign of hate,” Trump said. “Hillary Clinton has been running a hate-filled and negative campaign, with no policy, no solutions and no ideas. By contrast, I’ve been going around the country offering very detailed plans for reform and change.”
The Republican nominee’s statement was curious considering that his campaign has long focused on concerns about immigration and crime. He announced his campaign by saying Mexico was deliberately sending rapists to United States, accepted the Republican nomination by saying Americans were living in a “more dangerous environment than I have ever seen or anyone has ever seen”, and has repeatedly suggested that if Clinton is elected, we will “no longer have a country”. Trump amplified this rhetoric on Monday by telling the crowd: “You can go to Afghanistan, you can go to war-torn countries and you will find that it is safer than some of our inner cities.”
Further, on most issues, Trump has been relatively light on policy. According to an Associated Press report in late August, the Republican nominee has only posted seven policy proposals totaling 9,000 words on his website. In contrast, Clinton had released 112,735 words of proposals in 65 different issue fact sheets at the time.
The rally took place in North Carolina, a state won by Mitt Romney in 2012 where Clinton and Trump are neck and neck in polls. The increasingly diverse Tarheel State is considered Clinton’s best opportunity to turn a red state blue. In contrast, Trump is hoping to play the offensive in blue-collar industrial states in the midwest.

(The Guardian UK)

Friday, 19 August 2016

US election: Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort quits



Paul Manafort, campaign chairman for Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump, has resigned just two months after taking the helm.
Mr Trump confirmed Mr Manafort's departure in a statement.
He first took control of Mr Trump's campaign after the businessman's campaign manager was fired in June.
Mr Manafort, 67, has come under fire for his ties to Russian interests and former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych.
But it is not yet clear why he left the team, which was overhauled earlier this week with the addition of a new campaign chief executive and a new campaign manager.
Mr Trump has come under pressure in recent weeks after a series of controversial remarks and falling poll numbers.

Mr Manafort's lobbying connections to pro-Russia politicians in Ukraine are certainly a distraction for Mr Trump's presidential campaign - but unlikely to be the main reason for his departure.
In spite of Mr Manafort's efforts to impose discipline on the Republican nominee, Mr Trump continues to do badly in the polls and has reportedly bristled at efforts to bring him under control.
After all, "being Trump" is how he won the nomination in the first place.
His new team now faces the task of allowing him to be himself while making sure he stays on message - attacking his Democratic rival Hilary Clinton instead of sparking controversy with his own verbal missteps.

"This morning Paul Manafort offered, and I accepted, his resignation from the campaign," Mr Trump said in a statement.
"I am very appreciative for his great work in helping to get us where we are today, and in particular his work guiding us through the delegate and convention process."
Mr Manafort has faced public scrutiny in recent weeks after the New York Times reported that the Ukrainian government had uncovered ledgers pledging more than $12m (£9.2m) in undisclosed cash payments for his work with Mr Yanukovych, who fled after an uprising in November 2013.
Ukraine's Anti-Corruption Bureau is also investigating business deals worth millions of dollar that are linked to Mr Manafort.
He has vehemently dismissed the claims and denied any wrongdoing.

Mr Manafort, a former adviser to George HW Bush and Bob Dole, only joined the Trump campaign in March, to help the New Yorker secure the party's nomination.
The announcement of new campaign chief, Kellyanne Conway, and campaign CEO, Stephen Bannon, earlier this week raised questions about whether it would diminish Mr Manafort's role.
The longtime Republican operative was considered a guiding hand in steering Mr Trump toward a more conventional campaign as opposed to the anti-establishment brand of politics that made his primary campaign successful.
A hotel developer with no previous experience of politics, Mr Trump stunned the political world by beating far more experienced figures in the Republican party.
He faces Democrat Hillary Clinton, who has faced intense criticism over her email arrangements while secretary of state, in November's election.