US Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump proposed blocking money transfers to Mexico by illegal immigrants until that country agrees to pay for a border wall. (File Photo)
MILWAUKEE:
U.S. Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump proposed blocking money transfers to Mexico by illegal immigrants until that country agrees to pay for a border wall, pushing immigration policies that have won him votes as he faced likely defeat in Wisconsin's primary on Tuesday.
Trump's campaign said in a memo that if elected to the White House in November, he would use a U.S. anti-terrorism law to cut off remittances from people living in the United States illegally, unless Mexico made a one-time payment of $5 billion to $10 billion for a wall he has proposed along the U.S. border.
Trump released his plan on Tuesday morning as polls opened in Wisconsin, where U.S. Senator Ted Cruz of Texas appears poised for victory and is presenting himself as a uniter for Republican voters despite a Senate tenure marked by bitter feuds and uncompromising stances.
With Ohio Governor John Kasich running a distant third, Cruz is trying to make the case he is the only Republican candidate who can beat Trump to become the party's nominee in the Nov. 8 presidential election.
The Texan hopes a win on Tuesday will show he is the best candidate to unite the disparate factions of the Republican Party.
After a week of headlines focused on his missteps and his lag in Wisconsin polls, Trump turned to illegal immigration as a cornerstone of his campaign that is popular with his supporters. The New York billionaire has drawn strong criticism for his harsh rhetoric on Muslims, women and immigration, including his references to some Mexican immigrants as criminals.
The Trump plan detailed on Tuesday cited $24 billion a year in remittances to Mexico from its citizens in the United States, most of whom the campaign said were there illegally. It proposed modifying a financial provision of an anti-terrorism law to require immigrants to prove they are in the United States legally before they can wire money outside the country.
Asked about Trump's remittances plan, Democratic President Barack Obama called it unworkable. "The notion that we are going to track every bit of money ... sent to Mexico. Good luck with that," Obama said at a White House press briefing.
"This is just one more example of something that is not thought through and is primarily put forward for political consumption."
Trump said on Tuesday he was "absolutely, 100 percent" behind the wall plan. Talking to reporters as he shook hands with patrons at a George Webb diner in Wauwatosa, Wisconsin, Trump said the $10 billion cost of the wall would be a fraction of the $58 billion annual trade deficit between the United States and Mexico. Mexico has repeatedly said it will not pay for a wall.
"I think we're going to do very well in Wisconsin," Trump told reporters. He declined a customer's offer to let him try on one of the dairy state's signature "cheesehead" hats.
The real estate magnate has dismissed Cruz's claim he can unify the party, saying at rallies that "everybody hates Cruz."
And it is an unlikely role for Cruz, who has had a stormy relationship with party leaders since he forced the U.S. government to shut down for six days in 2013 in a budget fight with Obama. But enmity toward Trump among many in the party establishment was enough for five of his former White House rivals to back Cruz.
In the Democratic race, U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont has a slender lead in opinion polls in Wisconsin over front-runner Hillary Clinton and is trying to add to his momentum after winning five of the last six contests. He still faces a tough task in defeating Clinton for the nomination.
'FEVERED PIPE DREAM'
Cruz told reporters that only he and Trump had the ability to earn the 1,237 delegates from the primary contests necessary to win the nomination outright or to survive a contested convention.
Cruz also rejected talk that establishment Republicans might seek to nominate a new face at the convention, calling it a "fevered pipe dream of Washington that at the convention they will parachute in some white knight."
"It ain't going to happen. If it did, the people would quite rightly revolt," said Cruz.
While Cruz may carry the day in Wisconsin, the road to the nomination does not get any easier for him. The next states to vote, including New York on April 19 and five Northeastern states on April 26, are more Trump-friendly territory.
Trump leads with 737 delegates and Cruz has 475, according to an Associated Press count. Kasich, with 143 delegates, has no chance to gather enough delegates to win on the first ballot but has refused to end his candidacy.
In his remarks on Tuesday, Obama took a jab at Cruz as well as Trump, saying foreign leaders were constantly asking him about "some of the wackier suggestions" made during the campaign.
"I do have to emphasize that it's not just Mr. Trump's proposals.
You're also hearing concerns about Mr. Cruz's proposals, which in some ways are just as draconian when it comes to immigration, for example," Obama said.
(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
Trump's campaign said in a memo that if elected to the White House in November, he would use a U.S. anti-terrorism law to cut off remittances from people living in the United States illegally, unless Mexico made a one-time payment of $5 billion to $10 billion for a wall he has proposed along the U.S. border.
Trump released his plan on Tuesday morning as polls opened in Wisconsin, where U.S. Senator Ted Cruz of Texas appears poised for victory and is presenting himself as a uniter for Republican voters despite a Senate tenure marked by bitter feuds and uncompromising stances.
With Ohio Governor John Kasich running a distant third, Cruz is trying to make the case he is the only Republican candidate who can beat Trump to become the party's nominee in the Nov. 8 presidential election.
The Texan hopes a win on Tuesday will show he is the best candidate to unite the disparate factions of the Republican Party.
After a week of headlines focused on his missteps and his lag in Wisconsin polls, Trump turned to illegal immigration as a cornerstone of his campaign that is popular with his supporters. The New York billionaire has drawn strong criticism for his harsh rhetoric on Muslims, women and immigration, including his references to some Mexican immigrants as criminals.
The Trump plan detailed on Tuesday cited $24 billion a year in remittances to Mexico from its citizens in the United States, most of whom the campaign said were there illegally. It proposed modifying a financial provision of an anti-terrorism law to require immigrants to prove they are in the United States legally before they can wire money outside the country.
Asked about Trump's remittances plan, Democratic President Barack Obama called it unworkable. "The notion that we are going to track every bit of money ... sent to Mexico. Good luck with that," Obama said at a White House press briefing.
"This is just one more example of something that is not thought through and is primarily put forward for political consumption."
Trump said on Tuesday he was "absolutely, 100 percent" behind the wall plan. Talking to reporters as he shook hands with patrons at a George Webb diner in Wauwatosa, Wisconsin, Trump said the $10 billion cost of the wall would be a fraction of the $58 billion annual trade deficit between the United States and Mexico. Mexico has repeatedly said it will not pay for a wall.
"I think we're going to do very well in Wisconsin," Trump told reporters. He declined a customer's offer to let him try on one of the dairy state's signature "cheesehead" hats.
The real estate magnate has dismissed Cruz's claim he can unify the party, saying at rallies that "everybody hates Cruz."
And it is an unlikely role for Cruz, who has had a stormy relationship with party leaders since he forced the U.S. government to shut down for six days in 2013 in a budget fight with Obama. But enmity toward Trump among many in the party establishment was enough for five of his former White House rivals to back Cruz.
In the Democratic race, U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont has a slender lead in opinion polls in Wisconsin over front-runner Hillary Clinton and is trying to add to his momentum after winning five of the last six contests. He still faces a tough task in defeating Clinton for the nomination.
'FEVERED PIPE DREAM'
Cruz told reporters that only he and Trump had the ability to earn the 1,237 delegates from the primary contests necessary to win the nomination outright or to survive a contested convention.
Cruz also rejected talk that establishment Republicans might seek to nominate a new face at the convention, calling it a "fevered pipe dream of Washington that at the convention they will parachute in some white knight."
"It ain't going to happen. If it did, the people would quite rightly revolt," said Cruz.
While Cruz may carry the day in Wisconsin, the road to the nomination does not get any easier for him. The next states to vote, including New York on April 19 and five Northeastern states on April 26, are more Trump-friendly territory.
Trump leads with 737 delegates and Cruz has 475, according to an Associated Press count. Kasich, with 143 delegates, has no chance to gather enough delegates to win on the first ballot but has refused to end his candidacy.
In his remarks on Tuesday, Obama took a jab at Cruz as well as Trump, saying foreign leaders were constantly asking him about "some of the wackier suggestions" made during the campaign.
"I do have to emphasize that it's not just Mr. Trump's proposals.
You're also hearing concerns about Mr. Cruz's proposals, which in some ways are just as draconian when it comes to immigration, for example," Obama said.
© Thomson Reuters 2016
(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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