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US election: Trump v Clinton
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Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks at a town hall campaign event in Rochester, New Hampshire. Photo: AFP

Trump defend Obama ‘the Muslim’? Not a chance

Republican presidential frontrunner Donald Trump said it was not his job to stand up for US President Barack Obama after a man at one of his campaign events said he was a Muslim and "not even an American."

"Am I morally obligated to defend the president every time somebody says something bad or controversial about him? I don’t think so!" Trump said on Twitter.

Trump drew criticism on Friday from Republican and Democratic rivals in the 2016 race for the presidency when he failed to challenge a man at a New Hampshire town hall Thursday night who said Muslims were a problem in the United States.

WATCH: Trump respond to man who accuses Obama of being a Muslim

"We know our current president is one. You know he’s not even an American," the man said.

Trump, the billionaire television personality who leads the pack of Republicans seeking the presidential nomination, has cast doubt on whether Obama was born in the United States and therefore qualified to stand as president.

"This is the first time in my life that I have caused controversy by NOT saying something," Trump tweeted. "If someone made a nasty or controversial statement about me to the president, do you really think he would come to my rescue? No chance!"

The belief that Obama is a Muslim is not uncommon. A recent CNN/ORC poll found that 29 percent of Americans believe it, as do 43 percent of Republicans. Photo: AFP

Obama is a Christian who as president has attended church occasionally.

Trump rattled the Republican establishment with a summer surge to the top of the polls, overshadowing expected favourite Jeb Bush, the son and brother of two U.S. presidents. An unremarkable showing at Wednesday night’s Republican debate, where the frontrunner drew attacks from his many rivals, had some observers wondering if Trump frenzy is finally on the wane.

Trump’s anti-immigrant rhetoric, described as divisive even by members of his own party, has tapped into a vein of anger among like-minded supporters.

Trump is greeted by supporters in New Hampshire. Photo: Reuters

In August, two Boston brothers charged with urinating and beating a homeless Mexican man told police they were inspired by Trump. "Donald Trump was right, all these illegals need to be deported." the said, according a police report.

On Monday, opponents and supporters clashed outside a rally for Trump. Protesters, many of them Hispanic, shouted "shame on you," while some Trump fans retorted, "Keep them out!"

The tenor of the campaign has drawn parallels to the 2008 rallies by Republican presidential candidate John McCain and his runningmate, Sarah Palin, that drew virulent anti-Obama rhetoric including shouts of "terrorist" or "traitor."

McCain eventually had to confront the issue at an October campaign rally where a woman called Obama an Arab. He stopped her and called Obama a decent family man.

WATCH: John McCain defend rival Obama during the 2008 race

At a 2008 campaign rally, John McCain took the microphone away from a woman who said she didn’t trust Obama because he was Arab. Photo: AP

"I think a lot of the people who are supporting Donald Trump are the same people who showed up at those Sarah Palin rallies at the end of the 2008 campaign," said David Axelrod, former White House adviser and Obama campaign strategist.

"We know that there is this cohort out there who believe that we are being encroached on by illegal aliens, Muslims, China and Trump has tapped into that constituency," he said Saturday on CNN.

Far from trying to tamp down the controversy, Trump appeared to reach for more in his tweets Saturday morning, implying that Christians have suffered under Obama.

"Christians need support in our country (and around the world), their religious liberty is at stake! Obama has been horrible, I will be great," Trump said.

 

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