MILWAUKEE — Republican presidential candidates clashed over tax policy, military spending and immigration Tuesday night at a televised debate focused on economic issues.
The two-hour program, hosted by Fox Business Network, was a particularly high-profile outing for Jeb Bush, the former Florida governor whose standing in the polls has plunged after several disappointing appearances on the debate stage. Retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson also found himself in the spotlight, addressing the scrutiny of past biographical statements that has accompanied his rise in national polls and in Iowa, the first in the nation caucus state.
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Front-runner Donald Trump and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz pushed a hard crackdown on illegal immigration, which Bush and Ohio Gov. John Kasich warned would be an economic and political disaster for the U.S. if 11 million undocumented immigrants were forcibly deported.
Trump, who has staked much of his campaign on a plan to send undocumented immigrants back home, reiterated his pledge to build a wall across the southern U.S. border that Mexico would pay for. “The wall will be built. The wall will be successful,” Trump said, sidestepping questions on specifically how he would deport millions of people living illegally in the U.S.
Trump’s words drew immediate criticism from Kasich, who called the plan a “silly argument.” Bush, who had struggled to break through in the discussion, sided quickly with Kasich, warning the discussion was playing into Democrats’ hands.
“They are doing high-fives in the Clinton camp when they hear this,” Bush said, criticizing Trump’s deportation plan as not “embracing American values.”
Cruz battled back, aligning with Trump.
“The Democrats are laughing because if Republicans join Democrats as the party of amnesty we will lose,” Cruz said.
RELATED: Trump hails immigration setback
Cruz added that the “politics of it would be very different if a bunch of lawyers and bankers were crossing the Rio Grande or if a bunch of people with journalism degrees were driving down the wages of the press.”
Conservative critics of immigration often claim migrants depress income, but Cruz has called for allowing significantly more high-skilled immigrants and criticized Florida Sen. Marco Rubio’s Senate bill for not going far enough on that front.
Carson, who has batted back questions about whether he embellished stories of his violent boyhood and if he was offered a scholarship to the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, reoriented the issue of truthfulness to Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton.
“I look at Hillary Clinton who sits there and tells her daughter and a government official that this is terrorist attack tells everybody else it was a vide they call that a lie,” Carson said, raising questions about Clinton’s handling of the terrorist attacks on the American consulate in Benghazi, Libya.
Rubio, who performed strongly in the previous debate, faced his toughest challenge yet onstage as Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul accused him of betraying conservatism by offering a refundable child tax credit and calling for higher military spending.
“You cannot be a conservative if you’re going to keep promoting new programs you’re not going to pay for,” Paul said.
Rubio defended his tax plan, saying it would help encourage more stable families and upward mobility, and shot back at Paul on foreign policy.
“I know that Rand is a committed isolationist,” Rubio said. “I’m not.”








