Close X
Wednesday, November 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

Donald Trump Warns of Possible 'Riots' if Party Blocks Him at Convention

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Mar, 2016 10:46 AM
    Donald Trump warned on Wednesday that “riots” could break out if he is denied the Republican presidential nomination despite having won most of the party’s primary and caucus elections.
     
    “We’re way ahead of everybody. I don’t think you can say that we don’t get it automatically,” Trump told CNN the morning after his latest round of election victories, in the states of Illinois, North Carolina and Florida.
     
     
    “I think you would have riots,” he said. “You know, I’m representing many, many millions of people.”
     
    Trump, who has never held elected office, has dominated the 2016 presidential campaign thus far with his bombastic style and his unexpectedly strong popularity with masses of American voters.
     
    The billionaire businessman says many of his supporters — disenfranchised Americans who normally steer clear of politics — are already seething about what they perceive as a political and economic system that is rigged against them.
     
     
    “These are people who haven’t voted, because they didn’t believe in the system, or didn’t like candidates. They are 40, 50, and 60 years old and never voted. Many Democrats and many independents (are) coming in,” he said.
     
    But while Trump is the frontrunner for the nomination, political observers believe he may fall short of the 1,237 delegates needed for an outright win.
     
    That could lead to a complicated process of horsetrading and backroom dealing at the party convention in Cleveland, Ohio this summer which supporters fear could result in someone other than Trump being named the Republican standard bearer.
     
     
    “Now, if you disenfranchise those people and say, ‘I’m sorry, you’re 100 votes short, even though the next one is 500 votes short, I think you would see problems like you’ve never seen before. I think bad things would happen. I really do,” he told CNN.
     
    “I wouldn’t lead it, but I think bad things would happen.”
     
    Trump’s incendiary attacks on immigrants, threats of mass deportations and a proposal for a wall on the border with Mexico have ignited the campaign trail and drawn condemnation in some quarters, including President Barack Obama.
     
     
    Protests at Trump rallies have sparked angry confrontations. A protester was punched as he was being evicted at one rally, clashes erupted at another, and a protester rushed Trump on the stage at a third.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Tax Rates Changes And TFSA Limit Reduction Means Reviewing Your Financial Plan

    Tax Rates Changes And TFSA Limit Reduction Means Reviewing Your Financial Plan
    The vast majority of Canadians will not be affected by the new tax bracket for income over $200,000 a year, but everyone will see their tax-free savings account contribution limit be reduced back to $5,500 for 2016.

    Tax Rates Changes And TFSA Limit Reduction Means Reviewing Your Financial Plan

    Murder Charges Laid In Deadly Alberta Convenience Store Robberies

    Laylin Delorme, 24, Colton Steinhauer, 27, and the youth who can't be named were arrested Friday morning.

    Murder Charges Laid In Deadly Alberta Convenience Store Robberies

    Social Media Playing Key Role As Syrian Refugees Arrive In Canada

    Val Macdonald says it only took a few minutes before a little red notification popped up on her Facebook page after posting about donations for a Syrian refugee family.

    Social Media Playing Key Role As Syrian Refugees Arrive In Canada

    Kathleen Wynne Wants Clear Regulations On Medical And Recreational Marijuana

    Kathleen Wynne Wants Clear Regulations On Medical And Recreational Marijuana
    Ontario is looking for federal government guidance on regulating clinics that sell medical marijuana and on how pot should be sold for recreational use once it's legalized.

    Kathleen Wynne Wants Clear Regulations On Medical And Recreational Marijuana

    New Brunswick Professor Shocked By Guilty Verdict In Oland Murder Trial

    A professor of criminal justice history who has been following the Dennis Oland second-degree murder trial says he is shocked by the jury's guilty verdict.

    New Brunswick Professor Shocked By Guilty Verdict In Oland Murder Trial

    Finance Ministers Meet In Ottawa To Confront Canada's New Economic Reality

    Finance Ministers Meet In Ottawa To Confront Canada's New Economic Reality
    Provincial and territorial finance ministers are scheduled to gather tonight in Ottawa with federal counterpart Bill Morneau to begin confronting the hard economic truths facing Canada and the new Liberal government.

    Finance Ministers Meet In Ottawa To Confront Canada's New Economic Reality