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Donald Trump holding his campaign rally in the South Bronx, New York City. Photo: AFP

Donald Trump claims migrants in US illegally ‘building army’ to attack Americans

  • Former US president sought to portray migrants as a violent threat at a rally in New York City’s South Bronx
  • Trump is trying to woo black and Hispanic voters in one of the most Democratic counties in the US
Donald Trump

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump claimed without evidence that immigrants from Africa, the Middle East and elsewhere were “building an army” to attack Americans “from within”, once again using inflammatory rhetoric about migrants in the US illegally.

During a rally on Thursday in the mainly Hispanic and black neighbourhood of New York City’s South Bronx, Trump sought to portray migrants from China, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and other countries as a violent threat, even as studies show immigrants are not more likely to engage in criminality.

“Almost everyone is a male and they look like fighting age. I think they’re building an army,” Trump said to a few thousand supporters who gathered to hear him in the South Bronx’s Crotona Park. “They want to get us from within.”

“African-Americans are getting slaughtered, Hispanic-Americans are getting slaughtered,” he said.

Trump supporters at the campaign rally. Photo: AP

Throughout his campaign, Trump has repeatedly used incendiary language to accuse immigrants in the US illegally of fuelling violent crime, calling them “animals” responsible for “poisoning the blood” of the country.

As evidence, he points to individual instances of crimes, rather than aggregate data.

“We are not going to let these people come in and take our city away from us and take our country away,” Trump said, vowing to carry out “the largest criminal deportation operation in our country’s history” if re-elected to the White House.

Trump also sought to tie record levels of migrants caught crossing the US-Mexico border illegally with the economic plight of black and Hispanic voters, arguing, without evidence, that migrants were taking their jobs.

Trump’s decision to speak in the Bronx was in part a matter of convenience. His campaign schedule has been crimped by his trial in New York on charges he falsified business records to hide a hush money payment to a porn star. In April, he made a campaign appearance at a convenience store in Harlem, New York.

Trump is locked in a tight race with Democratic President Joe Biden ahead of the November 5 election. The Bronx rally was part of his effort to exploit Biden’s weakening support among Hispanic and black voters.

Donald Trump at the campaign rally. Photo: AP

Roughly 55 per cent of Bronx County residents are Hispanic and about one-third are Black, and the crowd on Thursday was more racially mixed than his usual rallies, which are predominantly white.

Trump’s campaign had a permit for up to 3,500 people to attend the rally, the New York City Parks Department said.

Recent polls suggest the Trump is gaining ground with blacks and Hispanics, who were critical to Biden’s win in 2020. Trump strategists see a chance to grab enough of their votes to make the difference in swing states in November.

Biden has had a flurry of actions and events focused on bolstering support among African-American voters.

He has singled out Trump and other Republicans for attacking programmes aimed at improving diversity, equity and inclusion, and on Thursday the president’s campaign released a pair of TV and radio ads criticising Trump’s treatment of black people.

Reuters interviewed nine Hispanic and black rally attendees who said they will vote for Trump in 2024. Of the seven who were voting age in 2020, six voted for Trump. They cited the economy and immigration as their main reasons for supporting him.

The crowd was more racially mixed than Trump’s usual rallies. Photo: AP

“It’s historic that he’s here,” said Steven Suarez, 46, who is Puerto Rican, a reference to Trump being the first Republican presidential candidate to make a stop in the Bronx since Ronald Reagan in the 1980s. “He could have gone anywhere in New York City. He could have gone to Manhattan. He chose to come here.”

In a New York Times/Siena College poll in March, Trump was selected by 23 per cent of black and 46 per cent of Hispanic respondents in a one-on-one match-up with Biden.

That is far higher than the 12 per cent of black and 32 per cent of Hispanic voters Trump won in 2020, according to Edison Research exit polls.

Political analysts have attributed weakening support for Biden among voters of colour in part to the outsized impact of inflation on people living pay cheque to pay cheque.

Attending his first Trump rally on Thursday, Ed Rosa, 60, said he was a long-time Democratic voter but felt his vote for Biden in 2020 was a mistake. He said the Democratic Party had “become too socialist” and was not handling the economy or the southern border well.

Additional reporting by Agence France-Presse

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