The Star Malaysia

‘Border plan a political stunt’

Obama rips Trump’s deployment of troops to block immigrants at rally

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MIAMI: Former president Barack Obama decried as a “political stunt” Donald Trump’s plan to send thousands of US soldiers to the Mexican border to block migrants from entering the country.

In a rousing speech on Friday to a Miami crowd as he campaigned for fellow Democrats ahead of next week’s midterm elections, Obama said the Republican administra­tion was “even taking our brave troops away from their families for a political stunt at the border.”

Trump, who has placed immigratio­n at the heart of his party’s election effort, has persistent­ly attacked the caravan of Central American migrants, denouncing it as a potential “invasion”.

Trump announced earlier this week that he would send thousands of troops to the border to beef up national defences at the border.

He has campaigned heavily on the issue, warning supporters on Thursday that migrants would soon be “overwhelmi­ng your schools, your hospitals, your communitie­s.”

Obama said the deployment was serving to “get folks angry and ginned up,” adding: “There’s just

If you don’t like what’s going on right now, don’t just complain. Don’t get anxious and freaked out, don’t throw up your hands in despair. Don’t boo. Don’t hashtag. Vote! Barack Obama

constant fearmonger­ing to distract from the record.”

The nation’s first African American commander in chief took the stage with Andrew Gillum, who is locked in a tight race for governor of Florida against pro-Trump Republican Ron DeSantis, and Senator Bill Nelson, who is running for re-election against outgoing Governor Rick Scott.

“Let’s make history happen right here in Florida,” Obama told jubilant supporters at the end of a speech that was occasional­ly interrupte­d by pro-Republican protesters.

Obama urged more decisive action by Americans who have grown frustrated by the first 21

months of Trump’s presidency.

“If you don’t like what’s going on right now, don’t just complain,” Obama said.

“Don’t get anxious and freaked out, don’t throw up your hands in despair. Don’t boo. Don’t hashtag. Vote!”

In the home stretch of a campaign marked by a recent deadly anti-Semitic attack and the intercepti­on of parcel bombs sent to prominent Democrats including Obama, the former president called for defending “the values that bind us to our fellow citizens, no matter who we are.”

But he also drilled down on core Democratic issues for the 2018 cam- paign, like health care and preserving protection­s for people with pre-existing conditions.

Obama, architect of the Obamacare health reforms that he signed into law in 2010, took Republican­s to task for “suddenly” saying they will protect pre-existing conditions coverage despite seeking to pass legislatio­n to do away with such protection­s.

“Let’s call it what it is. It’s a lie. They’re lying to you,” Obama said.

Americans on Tuesday will elect lawmakers for all 435 seats in the House of Representa­tives, 35 seats in the 100-member Senate, 36 governors and dozens of state legislatur­es.

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? On the campaign trail again: Obama flanked by Gillum (left) and Nelson raising their arms during a campaign rally for Florida’s Democratic candidates in Miami, Florida.
— Bloomberg On the campaign trail again: Obama flanked by Gillum (left) and Nelson raising their arms during a campaign rally for Florida’s Democratic candidates in Miami, Florida.

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