(Jeff Flake.AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)
Donald Trump lashed out at Sen. Jeff Flake on Sunday after the Republican from Arizona said he wasn't prepared to vote in favor of Trump.
"The Republican Party needs solid and submitted pioneers, not feeble individuals, for example, @JeffFlake, in the event that it will stop unlawful movement," Trump said on Twitter Sunday night.
He then tweeted a hour later: "The Great State of Arizona, where I simply had a huge rally (astonishing individuals), has an exceptionally frail and insufficient Senator, Jeff Flake. Tragic!"
In a meeting with Jake Tapper on CNN's "Condition of the Union," Flake, a vocal Trump depreciator, said he "basically can't" bolster Trump.
"I would not vote in favor of Hillary Clinton, and starting now, I would even now not vote in favor of Donald Trump," Flake said.
"I simply realize that I might want to vote in favor of Donald Trump. It's not happy to not bolster your chosen one," he included. "In any case, given the positions he's taken, and the tone and tenor of his crusade, I essentially can't."
Chip additionally proposed that Trump is in risk of losing Arizona to Democratic hopeful Hillary Clinton, a conviction he's held openly since June. Arizona has voted Republican in each race aside from one since 1952. Charge Clinton in 1996 was the main Democrat to convey the state in that range.
"Arizona ought to in any case be a red state. Be that as it may, Donald Trump, with the talk that he's under and the portrayals of, you know, a hefty portion of the state's populace, have put the state in play," Flake said.
Arizona is more than 30 percent Hispanic, as indicated by the most recent Census information.
Autonomous presidential applicant, Evan McMullin, came to Sen. Drop's resistance with a hit at Trump, saying the GOP chosen one is "[demonstrating] his delicacy" by assaulting individuals who contradict him.
Clinton joined the fight, including, "There will be nobody left in Washington for Trump to work with who he hasn't offended."
The land investor has been scrutinized from both sides of the walkway in the wake of multiplying down on his hard-line movement stage, which incorporates building a divider along the US-Mexico outskirt.
Donald Trump lashed out at Sen. Jeff Flake on Sunday after the Republican from Arizona said he wasn't prepared to vote in favor of Trump.
"The Republican Party needs solid and submitted pioneers, not feeble individuals, for example, @JeffFlake, in the event that it will stop unlawful movement," Trump said on Twitter Sunday night.
He then tweeted a hour later: "The Great State of Arizona, where I simply had a huge rally (astonishing individuals), has an exceptionally frail and insufficient Senator, Jeff Flake. Tragic!"
In a meeting with Jake Tapper on CNN's "Condition of the Union," Flake, a vocal Trump depreciator, said he "basically can't" bolster Trump.
"I would not vote in favor of Hillary Clinton, and starting now, I would even now not vote in favor of Donald Trump," Flake said.
"I simply realize that I might want to vote in favor of Donald Trump. It's not happy to not bolster your chosen one," he included. "In any case, given the positions he's taken, and the tone and tenor of his crusade, I essentially can't."
Chip additionally proposed that Trump is in risk of losing Arizona to Democratic hopeful Hillary Clinton, a conviction he's held openly since June. Arizona has voted Republican in each race aside from one since 1952. Charge Clinton in 1996 was the main Democrat to convey the state in that range.
"Arizona ought to in any case be a red state. Be that as it may, Donald Trump, with the talk that he's under and the portrayals of, you know, a hefty portion of the state's populace, have put the state in play," Flake said.
Arizona is more than 30 percent Hispanic, as indicated by the most recent Census information.
Autonomous presidential applicant, Evan McMullin, came to Sen. Drop's resistance with a hit at Trump, saying the GOP chosen one is "[demonstrating] his delicacy" by assaulting individuals who contradict him.
Clinton joined the fight, including, "There will be nobody left in Washington for Trump to work with who he hasn't offended."
The land investor has been scrutinized from both sides of the walkway in the wake of multiplying down on his hard-line movement stage, which incorporates building a divider along the US-Mexico outskirt.