PHOENIX — Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump coasted on the controversy dogging the early weeks of his campaign to draw thousands of people eager to hear his fiery anti-immigration rhetoric this weekend.
In his first major campaign swing since announcing his candidacy last month, Trump completed a two-day tour Saturday that featured a series of at times rambling speeches, jumping from topic to topic while nonetheless energizing rancorous crowds as large as any of his rivals have attracted. Lines of people wrapped around the block as Trump began to deliver his remarks here Saturday afternoon, his campaign estimating that as many as 10,000 people had registered to see him speak.
“The silent majority is back, and we’re going to take the country back,” Trump bellowed after the crowd erupted into chants, “USA! USA! USA!”
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Trump basked in the crowd’s adoration at the event, which drew thousands more people than expected, some traversing state lines to see the billionaire real-estate mogul in action. The fervor forced organizers to relocate the venue to accommodate the demand.
The presidential candidate has seen a sudden boost in the polls, but the first weeks of Trump’s campaign have also been marred by controversy over his offensive remarks about Mexican immigrants, and his refusal to back down. Trump only further fanned the flames on Saturday by agreeing to headline the event hear, which featured another controversial figure, Sheriff Joe Arpaio of Maricopa County.
“He’s getting a lot of heat,” Arpaio acknowledged of Trump during brief remarks before Trump’s appearance. “I know one thing, one trait that he has — he will never surrender.”
Trump’s speech in Phoenix, however, was devoid of the most controversial refrains that he has repeated in recent weeks — that Mexican immigrants were drug dealers, killers and rapists — perhaps a sign that calls for moderation from party leaders were taken to heart.
In fact, Trump said he was not only in favor of legal immigration, but he wanted to see the process become faster and easier. “I love legal immigration. I love it. I think it’s great,” he said. But to deter illegal immigration at the U.S. border, Trump suggested that the U.S. should somehow charge Mexico $100,000 for every person who entered the country illegally.
Trump even went populist at times, very subtly suggesting that conservatives need to care more about income inequality and provide for the nation’s poor.
“We got to take care of everybody,” he said. “Get used to it, conservatives.”
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Trump called fellow GOP presidential front-runner Jeb Bush out by name on several occasions, calling him “terrible” while condemning the former Florida governor’s stance on both immigration and Common Core.“I don’t see him as a factor,” Trump said. “I know it’s the Bush name, but in all fairness [it’s] not the greatest. Jeb Bush, I don’t get it.”
Trump let many of his featured guests take the lead when it came to heated anti-immigrant rhetoric. Trump has centered his campaign around a recent flash point of the country’s disjointed immigration laws in light of a fatal shooting in San Francisco that was allegedly committed by an undocumented immigrant with a long criminal rap sheet. Several parents who say their children were killed by undocumented immigrants joined Trump during every stop, first in California, then again in Las Vegas and Phoenix on Saturday.








