At 1 stop, blacks warm to Trump

They extol visit to ‘hood’; Clinton touts drug-cost plan

Anne Holton, wife of Democratic vice presidential candidate Tim Kaine, tries shaking hands Friday with a 3-D-printed prosthetic hand made by Virginia Western student Jason Garnett during a tour of a lab at the community college in Roanoke, Va., while campaigning.
Anne Holton, wife of Democratic vice presidential candidate Tim Kaine, tries shaking hands Friday with a 3-D-printed prosthetic hand made by Virginia Western student Jason Garnett during a tour of a lab at the community college in Roanoke, Va., while campaigning.

PHILADELPHIA -- Donald Trump was met with tears and gratitude as he sat with black supporters on Friday, including the mother of a slain young woman who was killed by a group that included men who had entered the U.S. illegally.

photo

AP

As Donald Trump meets with black supporters Friday in Philadelphia, Shalga Hightower (center) hugs family spokesman Charmil Davis. Hightower’s daughter, Iofemi, was killed in 2007 in an attack in a schoolyard. The killers “should never have been” in the United States, Shalga Hightower said.


RELATED ARTICLES

http://www.arkansas…">Commission picks moderators for Clinton-Trump debateshttp://www.arkansas…">FBI publishes notes on probe of Clinton emails

Hillary Clinton, acting on her pledge to curb what she has called outrageous drug costs, on Friday outlined a set of proposals to crack down on "unjustified" increases on prices for older treatments.

The plan released on the Democratic presidential candidate's website adds to a year of attacks against pharmaceutical companies that have raised the prices of lifesaving treatments, including the outcry over Mylan's EpiPen emergency allergy shot. Her measures would give the U.S. government a broader role in determining the correct price for some drugs, a task that's typically been off limits for federal regulators.

Trump's back-to-back meetings, held in a ballroom in northwest Philadelphia came as he works to broaden his appeal among more moderate and minority-group voters in the race against Clinton.

At the invitation-only discussion, Trump met with a dozen business, civic and religious leaders who praised him for traveling to "the hood" as part of his outreach efforts. Trump was warmly received by the group, including Daphne Goggins, a Republican official, who wiped away tears as she introduced herself to Trump, saying she's been a Republican most her life, but, "for the first time in my life, I feel like my vote is going to count."

Renee Amoore, an area business leader, assured Trump that he has support in the black community, despite his low standing in public opinion surveys.

"People say, Mr. Trump, that you have no African-American support. We want you to know that you do," she said, adding, "We appreciate you and what you've done, coming to the hood, as people call it. That's a big deal."

But Trump's meeting also highlighted the challenges he faces making inroads with blacks and Hispanics. Protesters gathered in front of the building where Trump appeared, and a coalition of labor leaders met nearby to denounce Trump's outreach to black voters as disingenuous and insulting.

The pastor who operates the nonprofit where Trump held his meetings publicly distanced himself from the visit.

And attendee Debbie Williams, a Republican running for Congress, told Trump her election race was "going well," but added, "I can only imagine what's going to happen" after the meeting.

Ryan Boyer of the Labor District Council said Trump "has no prescription to help inner-city America."

"The best predictor of future behavior is past behavior," said Boyer, speaking at the council's headquarters. "He did nothing for African-Americans in 30 years of public life. We reject his notion that we have nothing to lose by supporting him."

Next stop for Trump is Detroit today, where he's expected to visit a church with a predominantly black congregation.

Trump arranged to appear at Great Faith Ministries. After a New York Times report that he would not address the congregation and would give only scripted answers to questions pre-submitted by the pastor, his campaign said Thursday that Trump would speak to the crowd for five to 10 minutes.

But on Friday afternoon, the pastor, Bishop Wayne Jackson, insisted that talk of Trump speaking was only "rumors" and that he would be allowed to offer only a short greeting to the congregation, not a pitch for why they should vote for him.

Trump continued to take a hard-line stance on immigration, which he highlighted once again Friday in Philadelphia. The New York businessman met with Shagla Hightower, whose daughter, Iofemi, was killed along with two friends in a 2007 attack in a Newark, N.J., schoolyard.

Shalga Hightower said her daughter's killers "should have never been here" and praised Trump for giving her daughter recognition. "I truly, truly thank you from the bottom of my heart," she said.

Trump has been featuring at his events parents whose children have been killed by illegal aliens to try to underscore the risk they pose.

Hightower's story is "a horrible story," Trump said, "but it's a story a lot of people are going through."

Meanwhile, a Hispanic Trump supporter's assertion that without Trump there could one day be "taco trucks on every corner" in the U.S. stirred ridicule Friday across the Internet.

Hundreds of tweets with the hashtag "taco trucks on every corner" popped up on Twitter, most of them from people salivating for the dish.

The social media onslaught was in reaction to an interview Thursday night on MSNBC with Latinos for Trump founder Marco Gutierrez, who said Mexican culture is "dominant" and "imposing," before issuing his warning.

Some groups drove the taco-truck comment further with real trucks.

The Arizona Democratic Party put the phrase up on the marquee of its building in midtown Phoenix. Party officials also said there would be a taco truck on the property today.

'fair competition'

Clinton's drug plan calls for creation of a drug-pricing consumer response team that would include federal public health and competition officials, according to a statement released on her website. The group will monitor sharp price increases, potentially recommend penalties for unjustified increases and help make cheaper drugs available.

"It's wrong when drug companies put profits ahead of patients, with unjustified price increases not for new innovations, but for long-available and generic treatments," Clinton's campaign said in the statement. "We need rules of the road so fair competition keeps them in check."

Clinton's proposals specifically target price increases on older drugs, such as EpiPen and Daraprim -- the decades-old pill from Turing Pharmaceuticals that increased fiftyfold in cost -- not the price tags on new treatments. While the plan doesn't get into specifics, it would let the federal government determine how much drugs should cost, based in part on production cost and the value of the treatments to patients.

Once regulators determine that an old drug's price has gone up too much, Clinton's plan offers ways of pushing back. The government could purchase the medicine directly, or allow importation from other countries where alternatives are sold at lower prices.

Clinton proposed fining drugmakers that push prices too high, or forcing them to pay higher rebates. The rebate proposal would build on an existing rule in Medicaid that can require manufacturers to lower costs for Medicaid, the government health program for the poor, when drug prices rise faster than the rate of inflation.

Neither Clinton nor her running mate, Tim Kaine, had campaign events scheduled Friday.

Putin weighs in

In Russia, President Vladimir Putin blasted both Trump's and Clinton's tactics on the campaign trail but refused to publicly take sides in a U.S. presidential race in which he's been accused of secretly favoring the New York real estate mogul.

"They're both using shock tactics, just each in their own way," the Russian president said in an interview in the Pacific port city of Vladivostok. "I don't think they are setting the best example," he added.

Putin also said the hacking of thousands of Democratic National Committee emails and documents was a service to the public, but denied U.S. accusations that Russia's government had anything to do with it.

"Listen, does it even matter who hacked this data?" Putin said in an interview Thursday. "The important thing is the content that was given to the public."

Allegations of Kremlin interference have roiled the race in the wake of claims by U.S. officials that Russia was behind the hacking. The resulting release of internal party documents prompted several senior party officials to resign and shook the Clinton campaign over the summer. The FBI also is investigating cyberattacks on at least two state election boards that private security researchers suspect are linked to Russian criminal gangs.

"There's no need to distract the public's attention from the essence of the problem by raising some minor issues connected with the search for who did it," Putin said of the breach. "But I want to tell you again, I don't know anything about it, and on a state level Russia has never done this."

The FBI has high confidence that the government in Moscow was behind the theft at the Democratic National Committee and other Democratic Party organizations seeking to propel Clinton to victory over Trump in November, a person familiar with the findings has said.

Clinton's campaign struck back at Putin's assertions about the hacking and accused him of endorsing "foreign interference" in the election.

Clinton spokesman Jesse Lehrich said experts have concluded Russia was behind the hacking of committee emails and sought to draw a connection to Trump's campaign.

"Unsurprisingly, Putin has joined Trump in cheering foreign interference in the U.S. election that is clearly designed to inflict political damage on Hillary Clinton and Democrats," Lehrich said in an email.

Another world leader, former Israeli President Shimon Peres, said Friday that Trump's idea of America is "unbelievable" and should be ignored.

"The idea of Mr. Trump, the idea of America," Peres said in a Bloomberg Television interview at the Ambrosetti Forum in Cernobbio, Italy. "Shall I say, in a nice way, it's unbelievable, ignore it."

"America is leading the world, the world will not lead itself," said Peres, who shared the 1994 Nobel Peace Prize with former Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and former Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat. "Walls will not separate people. People are stronger than walls, they build them and destroy them and I hope America will decide to continue to lead the world by goodwill, by hope, and by change."

Information for this article was contributed by Jill Colvin, Errin Haines Whack and Terry Tang of The Associated Press; by Anjali Cordeiro, Zachary Tracer, Ilya Arkhipov, John Micklethwait, Henry Meyer, Stepan Kravchenko, Jake Rudnitsky, Margaret Talev, Flavia Rotondi, John Follain and staff members of Bloomberg News; and by Yamiche Alcindor of The New York Times.

A Section on 09/03/2016

Upcoming Events