Politics & Government

As Nevadans caucus, Donald Trump tells protester: 'I'd like to punch him in the face'

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump meets with supporters at a campaign rally Monday, Feb. 22, 2016, in Las Vegas.
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump meets with supporters at a campaign rally Monday, Feb. 22, 2016, in Las Vegas. AP

Nevada's Republican voters caucus today, and Donald Trump has a commanding lead of 45 percent support in the latest polls, compared to 19 percent for Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., and 17 percent for Sen. Ted Cruz. Still, Trump is fighting.

On Monday night, he said he wanted to punch a protester "in the face" after the man disrupted a campaign rally in Las Vegas.

"Here's a guy, throwing punches, nasty as hell, screaming at everything else, when we're talking," Trump told the crowd, although CNN reported the man did not appear to be fighting with security officers.

"The guards are very gentle with him, he's walking out like big high-fives, smiling, laughing," Trump continued, before saying to loud cheers: "I'd like to punch him in the face, I tell ya."

The incident was the latest in a string of controversial comments by Trump regarding protesters at his rallies. In November, after a Black Lives Matter protester was beaten and choked after disrupting a rally, Trump appeared to condone the rough treatment.

"Maybe he should have been roughed up, because it was absolutely disgusting what he was doing," he said on Fox News at the time.

On Monday night, the politician connected his desire to punch the protester with both the good "old days" in America and the country's more aggressive foreign policy under a President Trump.

"Look, see he's smiling. See he's having a good time," Trump said of the protester. "You know what I hate? There's a guy, totally disruptive, throwing punches, we're not allowed to punch back anymore. I love the old days. You know what they used to do to guys like that when they were in a place like this? They'd be carried out on a stretcher, folks."

After saying that he'd like to punch the protester in the face, Trump segued into an attack on Cruz, one of his main rivals.

"It brings up something," Trump said. "Two debates ago, they hit Ted Cruz with a question. . . . They hit him with a question no waterboarding. They said what do you think of waterboarding, is it good? And he got all messed up, he couldn't answer the question, he was a mess, because he didn't want to say waterboarding was good.

"Now, waterboarding, nothing is pretty but they are chopping off heads, they are drowning people in steel cages. . . and they are saying to themselves, 'Can you believe how weak, how weak and pathetic the Americans are?'" Trump said in a reference to the Islamic State, which has released videos showing them beheading and drowning prisoners.

"So they are asking Ted Cruz what do you think of waterboarding," Trump continued, breaking into an impression of Cruz. "'Well, uh, um, uh, what do I say. I want to be politically correct. Waterboarding is so terrible,' even though they are chopping off heads. He couldn't even answer the question. He was like a mess.

"Then they said to me: What do you think of waterboarding?" he said. "I said I think it's great but we don't go far enough."

To that, the crowd broke out into cheers and chants of U.S.A., U.S.A.

"It's true. We don't go far enough," Trump said. "We don't go far enough."

"Now the press will write tomorrow that Trump is a mean guy," he said. "I'm not a mean guy. I'm just a guy who doesn't want to be pushed around by a bunch of animals."

Trump is poised to win his third consecutive Republican presidential nominating contest, but low participation and an electoral system that rewards political insiders could diminish the magnitude of the outsider candidate's victory.

Rubio is counting on mainstream Republicans, including supporters of former Florida governor Jeb Bush, who exited the race Feb. 20, but they may not be enough to propel him to victory in the Silver State.

"Cruz has really been working the grassroots conservative Republicans, which might hurt Rubio, but I'd be shocked if he's able to win here," Herzik said. "The evangelical vote here is nowhere near what he found in Iowa. We're a state built on gambling. The bars never close. Our biggest city is nicknamed Sin City."

Cruz has introduced a new, libertarian-themed argument in Nevada, saying the federal government should relinquish ownership of land. Speaking in front of a banner that read, "Return our land," Cruz has been telling audiences that the government owns 85 percent of the land in Nevada and that if he's elected, "That is going to end."

Trump has emphasized his opposition to illegal immigration in a state with an Hispanic population of about 28 percent. His only television ad in Nevada features the story of a 17-year-old California football player who was killed by an undocumented immigrant who had been released from prison.

Rubio, meanwhile, has picked up endorsements Monday from two of the state's lawmakers, Sen. Dean Heller and Rep. Mark Amodei, both of whom had backed Bush. But Rubio's focus for much of the day was on his current rivals.

"There's a significant resistance to Donald Trump in the Republican Party," Rubio told reporters aboard his campaign jet after a day of crisscrossing Nevada, before firing a shot at Cruz. "There are a lot of people who come up to me and say they're still trying to decide between me and Ted. We need to continue to win more of those battles."

The remaining Republican candidates aren't making a serious play for Nevada. Ohio Gov. John Kasich campaigned in Virginia on Monday in advance of the state's March 1 primary. Dr. Ben Carson held an event in Nevada on Monday but hasn't advertised in the state or built a turnout operation.

Like Iowa's first-in-the-nation caucuses, Nevada's are restricted to party members and-in Nevada's case-people who registered to vote no later than Feb. 13. About 33,000 people, or 8 percent of registered Republicans, took part in Nevada's 2012 caucus, for which delays in counting ballots meant results weren't announced until 34 hours after the final votes were cast. Former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney won the Nevada caucus with more than twice as many votes as his nearest rival, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich. Romney, like about a quarter of the Nevada Republicans who caucused, is Mormon.

County Republican officials, who are in charge of ballot counting, are expecting a larger turnout this year and a closer outcome. In Clark County, which includes Las Vegas and about 73 percent of the Nevada population, volunteers at the 36 caucus sites will count ballots, write the totals on sealed envelopes and text photos of the results to the state party headquarters, said Ed Williams, the county Republican chairman. The system should avoid the delays experienced in 2012, he said.

"We're expecting 50,000 here in Clark County alone," Williams said. "We're prepared to go beyond that."

The county party has been receiving two to four phone calls per minute Monday asking how to caucus, Williams said, with interest driven by the competitiveness of the race, the Supreme Court vacancy left by Justice Antonin Scalia's death, and a general hunger to defeat Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton.

Almost 84,000 votes were cast in Nevada's Democratic caucuses on Saturday, in which Clinton defeated Senator Bernie Sanders.

The outcome of the Republican caucuses will rest largely on candidates' get-out-the-vote operations, said Michael Bowers, who teaches political science at the University of Nevada at Las Vegas.

"Turnout should be reasonably high, by our own low historical standards, in that, unlike the Democratic caucuses, one can simply show up, mark a ballot, and leave," he said. "That is, they will not be required to spend hours in the process."

Even so, polls likely overstate Trump's support compared to caucus participants, said Brett Jackson, a Cruz supporter and active Republican in North Las Vegas.

"Iowa showed us that the Trump campaign doesn't have a very good ground game," Jackson said in an interview after a Cruz rally in the Las Vegas suburb of Henderson. "He's counting on a lot of new voters, and the caucus system doesn't have a lot of new voters."

The Washington Post and Bloomberg contributed to this report.

This story was originally published February 23, 2016 at 6:22 AM with the headline "As Nevadans caucus, Donald Trump tells protester: 'I'd like to punch him in the face'."

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