DUBUQUE, Iowa — The day began with Donald Trump going to war with the top conservative news outlet in America. It wrapped up with Trump’s security dragging the most prominent Hispanic journalist in the country from his press conference for asking pointed questions about immigration — before letting him back in. In between, the campaign barred the state’s leading newspaper from the same event over a previous grievance.
Tuesday was just another day in the Trump campaign, with the candidate engaged in a never-ending series of feuds with reporters, campaign rivals, and critics. He kept it all simmering once again with tweets, press releases, and trash talk.
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“Should we be nice or not?” Trump asked a standing-room crowd of thousands at an event hall in here as he kicked off his speech.
“Noooooooooo!” came the reply from the audience.
And so Trump launched into a winding speech in which he called Secretary of State John Kerry a “schmuck” for signing off on the Iran nuclear deal and blamed America’s economic woes on “stupid people” negotiating trade deals. He took special joy in Jeb Bush’s recent struggles to defend the phrase “anchor baby,” which Trump has used frequently in arguing the 14th Amendment shouldn’t grant citizenship to children of illegal immigrants.
“[He’s] taking tremendous criticism for using the term anchor baby,” Trump said. “No one cares when I use it because they expect it.”
He closed by tweaking CNN over their ratings, threatening to charge them a $10 million charitable donation for the privilege of hosting him in their debate next month. Then the audience shuffled out to Twisted Sister’s “We’re Not Gonna Take It!”
Minutes before the speech, Trump finished a half-hour press conference in a nearby room where Univision anchor Jorge Ramos — a leading Trump critic — tried to ask a pointed question about Trump’s call to deport all undocumented immigrants. Trump refused to respond.
“Go back to Univision,” he said. “Sit down, you weren’t called.”
As Ramos continued to try and ask his question, a stocky white bodyguard with a buzz cut closed in and physically pushed him out of the room. Problem solved.
“He’s obviously a very emotional person, so I have no problem with it,” Trump told reporters when asked about the incident.
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Someone in the campaign must have realized that having the most-watched Spanish-language anchorman being tossed out of an event might not help with Trump’s pledge to win the Hispanic vote — a recent Gallup poll found him at a net negative 51% approval rating, 44 points worse than any other Republican — and Ramos returned for a combative exchange with Trump over whether his immigration plan was humane and realistic. By the end, Trump was interviewing Ramos, demanding the journalist answer whether he would deport criminals (he said he would) and asking him to name the amount Trump sued Univision for over a canceled pageant event ($500 million).
It would have made a great story for The Des Moines Register, the top newspaper in Iowa, but their reporter was barred from the event over Trump’s continued displeasure with an editorial by the paper calling on him to leave the race.
Trump’s spat with Ramos (who declined an interview request with msnbc) likely served both of them well with their audiences, but is yet another headache for GOP leaders who have to deal with one more clip in a growing highlight reel of Trump antagonizing Hispanic voters.
Trump’s immigration talk has already dragged rivals to uncomfortable places this month. Last week, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, who is fading in a must-win Iowa as Trump rises, said that he opposed birthright citizenship, then told the press he had no position, then clarified that he would not change the Constitution to address the issue. Bush, who opposes ending birthright citizenship, came under fire for using the phrase “anchor baby” — only to earn more condemnations from Asian-American critics after he said he was referring to narrow instances of primarily Asian elites flying to America to give birth.
The immigration issue meanwhile is catnip for Trump voters, who credit the candidate with going further than anyone in the field with his pledge to build a wall, deport all undocumented immigrants, and freeze legal immigration — prescriptions that have even the most conservative candidates in the field balking.








