Trump says 'angry majority' supports him against impeachment drive

Trump says 'angry majority' supports him against impeachment drive

President Donald Trump said on Friday he believed an "angry majority" of American voters will support him against an impeachment inquiry as he sought

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President Donald Trump said on Friday he believed an “angry majority” of American voters will support him against an impeachment inquiry as he sought to rally his supporters to voice their opposition to the Democratic attempt to oust him.

At a packed arena in Tupelo, Mississippi, Trump aired his grievances at length a day after the Democratic-controlled House of Representatives voted formally to lay out the rules for the inquiry into Trump’s attempt to get Ukraine to investigate his Democratic rival Joe Biden.

“The American people are fed up with Democrat lies, hoaxes and extremism,” said Trump. The Democrats, he said, “have created an angry majority that will vote many do-nothing Democrats out of office in 2020.”

Trump also voiced confidence that he will be able to defeat any Democrat who he ends up opposing in the November 2020 election.

“We’re kicking their ass,” he said.

He ridiculed Beto O’Rourke hours after the former U.S. representative abruptly dropped out of the race for the Democratic presidential nomination on Friday.

“Beto, that poor bastard – poor, pathetic guy,” said Trump.

Biden, he said, is “dropping like a rock.”

Reuters

Trump says ‘angry majority’ supports him against impeachment drive

President Donald Trump said on Friday he believed an ‘angry majority’ of American voters will support him against an impeachment inquiry as he sought to rally his supporters to voice their opposition to the Democratic attempt to oust him.

Trump returned again and again to the Ukraine scandal swirling around him. He defended his July 25 phone call with Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskiy that lies at the heart of the impeachment accusations against him.

“Now I’m an honest person anyway, but do you think when I’m making a call to a newly elected president of a country that I would say something improper when I know so many people are listening on the line?” said Trump.

Trump called on Republicans to rally around him.

“Make no mistake, they are coming after the Republican Party and me because I’m fighting for you,” he said.

Trump was in Tupelo to campaign on behalf of the state’s Republican candidate for governor, Tate Reeves, who is currently the Mississippi lieutenant governor.

Reeves is in a tight race against the Democratic candidate, Jim Hood, who is serving his fourth term as the state’s attorney general. Vice President Mike Pence will campaign for Reeves on Monday.

The contest on Tuesday could be an indicator of the country’s mood a year away from the election that will determine whether Trump gets a second term as U.S. president.