NEW YORK — Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump’s lead may be slipping — but his zingers are as fresh as ever.
Dr. Ben Carson is “weak on immigration, and wants to get rid of Medicare,” Trump said, expressing disbelief at the former neurosurgeon’s consistently strong polling. Sen. Marco Rubio is “overrated” and a “disaster with his credit card.” Trump won’t do an an impression of former Gov. Jeb Bush because he doesn’t “like showing a person sleeping at a podium.”
At a press conference in Trump Tower, where a massive photo of him hung overhead, Trump confidently and comfortably defended his strength in the Republican primary, even as his polling numbers slip and rival candidate Carson’s lead solidifies. Back to brazen form after being comparatively subdued at the recent GOP debate, the real estate mogul fired off zinger after zinger about his rivals.
RELATED: NBC/WSJ poll: Carson surges into lead of national GOP race
“We’re doing well, and if you add Ben and myself, we’re beating everybody by a lot!” Trump said with outstretched hands during a press conference held ostensibly to promote his new book. He spent about an hour speaking with the media, reveling in questions lobbed by everyone from the usual political press corp to the foreign press and entertainment reporters.
Trump spoke at length about the Republican debates, repeatedly saying he “doesn’t care” about the format of the debates, even as his campaign confirmed that they would work individually as well as with other campaigns to lobby networks on the specifics of the face-offs. Trump threatened a boycott of the last debate, and his campaign manager suggested he’d boycott the NBC News-Telemundo debate — even if the RNC revoked its promise to suspend the event.
Trump argued that Republican candidates needed a better set-up because of how the Democratic debate went.
“Hillary Clinton was given all softballs,” he said. “Now that was staged by the Democrats. They did a smart thing staging, we’re going to as well, but frankly I don’t care that much.”
Trump does, however, care about the number of candidates running, arguing that more candidates should drop out.
“If a person has been campaigning for four or five months and they’re at zero or 1 or 2%, they should get out,” he said.








