U.S. Republican front-runner Donald Trump expressed
confidence on Saturday that he could push back attempts by his rivals to knock
him off his top perch, saying he could stand on New York's Fifth Avenue
"and shoot somebody," and still not lose voters.
Nine days from the first nominating contest in Iowa, however, it
was Republican rival Marco Rubio who won the endorsement Saturday from the Des
Moines Register, the state's biggest and most influential newspaper. On the
Democratic side, the Register picked Hillary Clinton.
The endorsements were big developments for both Rubio and
Clinton. Rubio, a Florida senator, has been running third behind Trump and
Texas Senator Ted Cruz in Iowa, while Clinton has struggled to
fend off a
challenge to the Democratic nomination from Bernie Sanders.
Trump and Cruz, Trump's chief obstacle to a victory in
Iowa, held competing rallies across the state while in New Hampshire, other
candidates battled for votes in that state's Feb. 9 first-in-the-nation primary
for the Nov. 8 election.
Trump, the New York billionaire and former reality TV star
who has been virtually impervious to attacks from his opponents, pushed the
limits of his political rhetoric again in Sioux Center, Iowa.
"I could stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and
shoot somebody and I wouldn't lose any voters," he said.
Trump has been a difficult target for criticism from his
rivals because not all of his supporters are conservatives and many are most
interested in his projection of strength, not where he stands on a particular
issue.
The latest Reuters-Ipsos tracking poll had Trump pulling
in 40.6 percent support of Republican voters nationally. A CNN/ORC poll has
Trump up in Iowa with 37 percent to 26 percent for Cruz, who has led in some
other Iowa polls.
Trump did not repeat the "shoot somebody" line
at a later rally in Pella, while stressing to the crowd there that he would
tone down his rhetoric as president.
BECK BACKS
CRUZ
Cruz responded to Trump at an event in Ankeny, where he picked up
the endorsement of conservative firebrand Glenn Beck, a counterweight of sorts
to Trump's endorsement by 2008 vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin.
"Listen, I will let Donald speak for himself. I can say I
have no intention of shooting anybody in this campaign," Cruz said.
Beck was more direct.
"There is one thing to have a healthy ego, there is another
to give a man who believes those kinds of things, who has a habit of anyone who
stands in his way of destruction," Beck said. "To give that man the
full power and scope of the office of the presidency is something we will grow
to regret."
Iowa Republican Senator Chuck Grassley was an introductory speaker
at Trump's Pella event. Grassley did not endorse Trump but repeated Trump's
signature phrase, saying Republicans have a chance to "make America great
again."
During his speech, Trump called Fox News anchor Megyn Kelly biased
and said she should not be a moderator at a Fox-hosted Republican debate in Des
Moines on Thursday. Kelly's questioning at an Aug. 6 debate in Cleveland had
prompted Trump to unleash a series of insults at her.
There was no indication that Fox planned to remove her as a
moderator.
"Megyn Kelly has no conflict of interest. Donald Trump is
just trying to build up the audience for Thursday's debate, for which we thank
him," said a Fox News spokesperson.
BLOOMBERG CONSIDERING
INDEPENDENT BID
The potential for more chaos in what has been a turbulent race on
both the Republican and Democratic sides emerged on Saturday with the news that
former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg might launch an independent run for
president.
A source said part of Bloomberg's concern was the problem that
Clinton is having in defeating Sanders.
"I hope he runs," Trump told reporters in Pella.
At a first in the Nation forum for candidates in Nashua, New
Hampshire, former Florida Governor Jeb Bush was notably withering in his
criticism of Trump.
He reminded voters of Trump's dismissal of Senator John McCain as
not a hero because he got captured during the Vietnam War. McCain spent 5-1/2
years as a prisoner of war. He was a two-time winner of the New Hampshire
primary and the 2012 Republican presidential nominee.
"It is not strong to insult women. It is not a sign of
strength when you insult Hispanics. It is not a sign of strength when you say
that a POW was a loser because they got caught. John McCain is a hero,"
Bush said.

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