Trump vows to build wall with Mexico as he rails against media
● Threatens to ‘shut down US government if it is necessary’
Donald Trump says he will close down the US government if necessary to build his wall along the Mexico border.
The president told supporters at a “Make America Great Again” rally in Phoenix, Arizona, that the Democrats were being “obstructionist”.
Protests against Mr Trump turned unruly as police fired pepper spray at crowds after rocks and bottles were apparently thrown at officers.
A haze enveloped the night sky as protesters and police clashed outside the convention centre where the president was speaking.
Mr Trump had opened his political rally with calls for unity and an assertion that “our movement is about love”, but he then erupted in anger.
He blamed the media for widespread condemnation of his response to deadly violence at a white supremacists’ protest in Charlottesville, Virginia, and shouted that he had “openly called for healing, unity and love” after the tragedy and had been misrepresented in news coverage.
Protesters outside the Phoenix event fled the scene coughing as an officer in a helicopter used a speaker to urge them to leave the area.
Officers responded with pepper spray to break up the crowd after people threw rocks and bottles and dispersed gas, police spokesman Jonathan Howard said.
Four people were arrested on charges related to the protest, and one was arrested on an unrelated warrant, Police Chief Jeri Williams said.
Inside the convention centre, Mr Trump had read from his responses to the racially charged violence in Charlottesville when a woman was killed by a man who ploughed a car through counter-protesters, but he skipped over his controversial observation that “many sides” were to blame.
That assertion prompted Democrats and many Republicans to denounce him for not unequivocally calling out white supremacists and other hate groups.
“You know where my heart is,” Mr Trump told the crowd of thousands into the Phoenix hall. “I’m only doing this to show you how damned dishonest these people are.”
Well after his appearance had ended, he sent a tweet saying: “Not only does the media give a platform to hate groups, but the media turns a blind eye to the gang violence on our streets.” The broadside against the media was one of several detours he took from his prepared remarks at a rally where he was introduced by vice-president Mike Pence and other speakers appealing for unity and healing.
He acknowledged that his own advisers had urged him to stay on message, but he simply could not.
He said he had aimed to avoid “controversy” by not immediately pardoning former sheriff Joe Arpaio, who is awaiting sentencing in Arizona after his conviction in federal court for disobeying court orders to put a stop to his immigration patrols, but the president left little doubt he wanted to do it.
“I’ll make a prediction: I think he’s going to be just fine,” he said.
And he skewered both of Arizona’s Republican senators, insisting that his refusal to mention their names showed a “very presidential” restraint.
He said his aides had begged him, “Please, please, Mr President, don’t mention any names. So I won’t.” Yet he clearly described John Mccain as the reason Congress did not repeal and replace the muchmaligned Affordable Care Act, and he labelled Jeff Flake as “weak” on borders and crime.
As for how he would assist with the upcoming Herculean tasks facing Congress – passing tax reform, raising the debt ceiling, and agreeing on a budget – he offered little detail.
However, he did threaten that if legislators force a government shutdown “we’re building that wall”, a reference to his campaign promise to close off the border with Mexico.