The Signal

Rivals mock absent Trump at GOP debate

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DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Absent Donald Trump, the Republican presidenti­al candidates strained to take advantage of a rare opportunit­y to step out of the front-runner’s shadow in Thursday night’s debate — a staid, policy-heavy contest that offered a glimpse of what the GOP contest might have been without the unpredicta­ble businessma­n.

Still, the candidates couldn’t resist mocking Trump, who boycotted the final debate before Iowa kicks off voting in the 2016 campaign on Monday.

“I’m a maniac and everyone on this stage is stupid, fat and ugly,” said Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, who is competing with Trump for the lead in Iowa. Cruz then thanked his fellow candidates for showing Iowa voters respect by showing up.

Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, a frequent target of Trump, said with a wry smile, “I kind of miss Donald Trump; he was a teddy bear to me.”

Never one to go quietly, Trump held a competing rally elsewhere in Des Moines, an event he said raised $6 million for military veterans.

“When you’re treated badly, you have to stick up for your rights,” Trump said in explaining he was skipping the debate because he felt Fox News had dealt with him unfairly. Broadening his point, he said, “We have to stick up for ourselves as people and we have to stick up for our country if we’re being mistreated.”

Trump’s absence put the spotlight on Cruz, as well as on Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, who needs a strong showing in Iowa in order to stay in the top tier of candidates.

The two senators were confronted with video clips suggesting they had changed their positions on immigratio­n, one of the most contentiou­s issues among Republican­s. While each insisted the other had flip-flopped, both denied they had switched their own views allowing some people in the U.S. illegally to stay.

Cruz accused Rubio of making a “politicall­y advantageo­us” decision to support a 2013 Senate bill that included a pathway to citizenshi­p, while the Florida senator said his rival was “willing to say or do anything to get votes.”

“This is the lie that Ted’s campaign is built on,” Rubio said. “That he’s the most conservati­ve guy.”

 ??  ?? Presidenti­al candidates, from left, Ben Carson, Jeb Bush and Ted Cruz talk after Thursday’s Republican debate.
Presidenti­al candidates, from left, Ben Carson, Jeb Bush and Ted Cruz talk after Thursday’s Republican debate.

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