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Clinton’s regulation­s, taxes ‘anti-farmers’

According to Trump, Hillary ‘wants to shut down family farms’

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DES MOINES, Iowa—Donald Trump said rival Hillary Clinton will push regulation­s and high taxes that will hurt family farmers as he campaigned in Iowa, an agricultur­al state that remains a presidenti­al election battlegrou­nd.

Trump warned a crowd in Iowa on Saturday that Clinton “wants to shut down family farms” and implement antiagricu­lture policies.

His comments came in a speech to the annual “Roast and Ride” fundraiser for Republican Sen. Joni Ernst.

Trump skipped the 42-mile motorcycle ride that preceded the event.

Joining the presidenti­al nominee on stage were top Iowa Republican­s — among them Ernst, Gov. Terry Branstad, Sen. Chuck Grassley and Rep. Steve King — in a rare show of establishm­ent support for a candidate who has struggled to unite his party.

Commitment

In a gesture to Iowa’s agricultur­e industry, Trump renewed his commitment to continuing a requiremen­t that all gasoline sold contain an ethanol-based additive, an issue important to corn growers.

He also promised to cut taxes on family farms, which he called the “backbone” of the country.

“Hillary Clinton wants to shut down family farms just like she wants to shut down the mines and the steelworke­rs,” he said at the Iowa State Fairground­s.

“She will do this not only through radical regulation, but also by raising taxes on family farms — and all businesses — to rates as high as nearly 50 percent.”

Clinton’s campaign website touts a plan to increase funding to support farmers and ranchers in local food markets and regional food systems, saying she’ll create a “focused safety net to help family farms get through challengin­g times.”

It also says she plans to target federal resources in commodity payment, crop insurance, and disaster assistance programs to support family operations.

Branstad, in an interview with The Associated Press, said he felt Trump could score points against Clinton by focusing on agricultur­al issues.

Branstad, whose son runs Trump’s campaign in the state, said he also hopes Trump would launch campaign ads there and that he sees the race as “about even.”

Speaking to an overwhelmi­ngly white crowd, Trump again pledged that as president he would help AfricanAme­ricans living in cities with high crime and low employment.

He offered no specifics for how he would achieve that goal.

Trump drew an online backlash on Saturday for a tweet he sent in response to the shooting death of NBA star Dwyane Wade’s cousin, who was gunned down near the Chicago school where she had planned to register her children.

“Just what I have been saying. African-Americans will VOTE TRUMP!” Trump tweeted.

Campaignin­g in Florida, Clinton running mate Tim Kaine said, “We just ought to be extending our sympathy to the family,” and added, “That’s the only reaction that’s appropriat­e right now.”

Clinton met on Saturday for more than two hours with intelligen­ce officials at the FBI office in White Plains, New York, for her first overview of the major threats facing the nation around the globe since she became the Democratic nominee. (AP)

 ?? (AP FOTO) ?? ISSUE ON IMMIGRANTS. Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump shares the stage with the family of Sarah Root at Joni’s Roast and Ride at the Iowa State Fairground­s, in Des Moines, Iowa — Sarah’s mother, Michelle Root, (second from left), and...
(AP FOTO) ISSUE ON IMMIGRANTS. Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump shares the stage with the family of Sarah Root at Joni’s Roast and Ride at the Iowa State Fairground­s, in Des Moines, Iowa — Sarah’s mother, Michelle Root, (second from left), and...

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