Arab Times

Trump rallies vets at Thunder gathering

‘We’re going to take care of our veterans’ ‘I tell the truth, I’m not a liar’

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WASHINGTON, May 30, (Agencies): Republican Donald Trump told a motorcycle rally on Sunday that people in the US illegally often are cared for better than the nation’s military veterans, without backing up his allegation.

“Thousands of people are dying waiting in line to see a doctor. That is not going to happen anymore,” Trump told veterans gathered in front of the Lincoln Memorial as part of the annual Rolling Thunder event, which brings thousands of motorcycli­sts to Washington each Memorial Day weekend.

Trump has repeated his comparison of the treatment of immigrants and veterans frequently during the campaign. Congress and many states have written an assortment of laws and policies designed to restrict government services to people living in the country illegally.

The Veterans Affairs Department, meanwhile, has come under criticism and congressio­nal scrutiny for a number of failures, from cutting off benefits of thousands of veterans who were wrongly declared dead to chronicall­y long wait times for medical services at VA health care sites. As many as 40 patients died while awaiting care at the Phoenix VA hospital alone.

The Rolling Thunder event is organized to draw attention to veterans’ issues and dedicated to rememberin­g prisoners of war and service members missing in action.

“We’re with you 100 percent,” Trump told the crowd.

Trump, now the presumptiv­e Republican nominee for president, angered veterans last year when he said he liked “people who weren’t captured” in wars. That had been a dig at Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., the party’s 2008 nominee, who had been captured and held for more than five years during the Vietnam War after his plane was shot down. Trump claimed that McCain was a “war hero because he was captured.”

Trump quickly tried to walk back the comment but has refused to apologize to McCain.

Many veterans groups were furious, but since then Trump has worked to try to repair the damage. He frequently honors veterans at his rallies, and he has come out with a plan to overhaul the Department of Veterans Affairs. He also held a fundraiser for veterans’ causes in place of an Iowa debate that he skipped.

Still, Trump, who avoided the draft through a series of deferments, drew WASHINGTON, United States, May 30, (AFP): Gary Johnson, the former Republican governor of New Mexico, on Sunday won the presidenti­al nomination of the Libertaria­n Party, a sliver group hoping to make an outsized impact in this election year.

Johnson came within a half-point of scoring an outright first-ballot victory at the party’s nominating convention in Orlando, Florida; a second ballot put him over the top, with 56 percent.

“I tell the truth, I am not a liar,” Johnson told the group, insisting that his frank approach would appeal to disaffecte­d voters and help the long-marginal Libertaria­ns achieve “major-party status.”

As a Libertaria­n, Johnson advocates eliminatin­g the income tax and abolishing the Internal Revenue Service.

A self-made businessma­n who worked as New Mexico governor to lower taxes and reduce bureaucrac­y, he pushed for the legalizati­on of marijuana.

scrutiny for not immediatel­y distributi­ng the $6 million he’d claimed to raise, including $1 million he’d pledged himself. He is expected to hold a news conference Tuesday to announce the names of the charities selected to receive the money.

Rolling Thunder spokeswoma­n Nancy Regg estimated Sunday’s event drew about 5,000 people — smaller than the crowds Trump typically attracts. The large plaza between the Lincoln Memorial and the Reflecting Pool on the National Mall had large, empty pockets with no long lines for security, despite the thousands of bikers in town for the group’s ride from the Pentagon and through the streets of Washington.

Trump, who frequently boasts about his crowd size, however, claimed that 600,000 people were outside trying to get in.

“I thought this would be like Dr. Martin Luther King, where the people would be lined up from here all the way to the Washington monument, right? Unfortunat­ely, they don’t allow

In 2012, he was the Libertaria­n candidate, garnering 1.2 million votes, the party’s best showing ever.

In at least two recent national polls, Johnson scored 10 percent in hypothetic­al three-way contests against Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton.

The Libertaria­ns -- whose central goal was pithily described by one delegate in Orlando as “minimum government, maximum freedom” -- hope to tap into widespread discontent this year with the majorparty choices.

Johnson ramped up criticism of one of those choices, the Republican Trump, telling reporters Sunday that the real estate developer was a “racist” because of his descriptio­n of Mexican immigrants as rapists.

In an interview earlier this month with AFP, Johnson described Trump and Clinton as “the two most polarizing figures in American politics today.”

He added, “I’m more liberal than Hillary on social issues, and I’m more conservati­ve on fiscal issues

‘em to come in,” Trump complained as he finished up his speech.

Trump’s comments on McCain were also on the minds of many at the event, including John LeBoutilli­er, a former New York congressma­n who spoke at the event.

LeBoutilli­er said Trump “got a little twisted up” with his anger when he spoke about McCain, but said the comment was “totally justified.”

“There has never been a public official who’s been worse on the POW issue than John McCain,” he said.

McCain, in fact, has a long record of supporting veterans’ issues in Congress. Most recently, he was instrument­al in the passage of landmark legislatio­n to overhaul the Department of Veterans Affairs to alleviate the long delays in getting care, and another aimed at reducing a suicide epidemic among military veterans. He has also pushed for the VA to do more to fire poor-performing employees.

“Sen. McCain has made veterans issues, specifical­ly fixing the broken VA health care system, one of his top than Ted Cruz was,” said Johnson, referring to the Texas senator who quit the Republican race early this month.

That, Johnson said, made him “the best of both worlds.”

The Libertaria­ns’ convention drew far closer media attention than usual, and Johnson told the group that “millions of people are going to be trying to understand what it is to be a Libertaria­n.”

One chart displayed at the convention showed web searches for the party quintuplin­g after Trump became the presumptiv­e Republican nominee.

In balloting carried out on plain index cards, Johnson beat out contenders including Austin Petersen, a businessma­n and political commentato­r, and John McAfee, the founder of the antivirus software company who once fled Belize after police sought to question him in a murder case.

The Libertaria­n convention was to vote separately for its vice presidenti­al nominee.

priorities,” McCain spokeswoma­n Rachael Dean said in an email. “However, Sen. McCain is the first to argue there is still work to be done — the VA system is painfully bureaucrat­ic, slow to change and to react.”

Still, LeBoutilli­er’s sentiment was echoed by veterans, including Mike Sukeena, who said that he’d discussed Trump’s comment with his fellow veterans.

“McCain was a prisoner of war, but I don’t know — I think he’s deserted the veterans, I really do,” said Sukeena, 72, who served in Vietnam during his six years in the Navy, and now lives in Manassas, Virginia. “All of them have turned their back on the veterans.”

“I like the fact that he’s going to make America great again and that he’s going to work for our veterans,” he said.

“We’re going to rebuild our military and we’re going to take care of our veterans,” Trump told the crowd of thousands, many of whom wore leather vests, veterans’ hats and biker insignia.

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