tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN April 13, 2016 12:00am-1:01am PDT
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if you missed any of our town hall with donald trump and his family, can you see the whole thing starting right now. good night. good evening. it's a big night. john kasich and his family last night. right now donald trump and members of his family, republican front-runner, exactly one week before the primary. >> tonight he's on his home turf. >> this is home. it's great to be home. >> and now after a wisconsin thumpi thumping, campaign changes and a week of bad headlines, donald trump is looking to get his campaign back to its winning ways. >> i love these people! these are my people! man! >> he's back, recharging the batteries and zapping his rival.
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>> it's l-y-i-n, lyin' ted. >> and that's not all he's spelling out. >> it's a fix. >> blasting the whole delegate ball game. >> it's a crooked, crooked system. >> so, now that he's facing a contest at the convention in cleveland, not a coronation, can his campaign adapt? and will the family name give that campaign the boost it needs? >> i've got so many family members here today. look at that. boy, oh, boy, my sons and my daughter. did ivanka do a good job? >> this is an "anderson cooper 360" cnn republican town hall. candidates and their families. voters seeking answers before making a choice that could make history.
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>>. >> satellite radio channel 116 and westwood radio network. welcome to all of you. we're here with donald trump, his daughter ivanka and sons will be joining us shortly. in the audience, republicans, all from new york. they came up with the questions. we reviewed them to make sure they don't overlap. i'll ask the candidate questions myself. but it's a chance for the voters to hear from the candidate and those closest to him. before we start, i want to bring out donald trump. you were certified today the winner of the missouri primary, which means you picked up another 12 delegates. new york poll, 60% in new york, way ahead of all the other candidates. even the quinnipiac poll had you around 55%, way ahead. you got good news.
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you've been critical of what happened in colorado. i want to read out some things you've said. you said the nominating system in colorado is, quote, rigged, disgusting and dirty. you called it a corrupt deal full of crooked shenanigans. ted cruz is saying you're just being a whiner. the bottom line, the rules are the rules. didn't you just get outplayed on the ground? >> i don't think so. you know, first of all, i watched ted cruz and i watched him very strongly say, well, he's been winning. you know, i've won 22 states and he's won 10. and we're really way up in votes. in terms of the voters, which to me is very important but it's never talked. i'm millions of votes ahead of him and hundreds of delegates ahead of him. but the colorado thing was very, very unfair. and i thought louisiana was unfair. i won louisiana. i won it easily -- >> the popular vote? >> he got the popular vote. and because of all the shenanigans that go on -- >> you call them shenanigans. they are the rules. did you know -- >> i know the rules very well
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but i know it's stacked against me by the establishment. i fully understand it. we had people out there that weren't heard. today it was announced -- the numbers were announced, they put out something on twitter. we stopped trump. that was put out by the party in colorado. the point is, it was stacked against us. now, we won our share -- >> you could have had a better organization on the ground. >> i don't know if it would have mattered because it was totally set in stone. you saw republicans that wanted to go, wanted to be trump delegates and they're burning their card on the internet. some people -- >> he had a lot of organization, reaching out to people who wanted to be delegates. it was a whole electroral process. >> we had delegates and the republican party was probably 100% controlled by the rnc, which maybe doesn't like this happening because i'm a self-funder. putting up my money. they don't like me putting up my own money because they don't have any control of me. i'm working for the people.
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when you talk about winning, i won most of it. i'm not complaining. there were a couple i won that he's complaining about. i've won far more than anybody else. >> the rules were set last year. nothing mysterious. nothing new. now changed. the rules are the same. >> they changed the rules a number of months ago. >> about eight months ago. >> but you had a long time to prepare -- >> they changed the rules because they saw how i was doing, they didn't like it. same way in florida. i won florida in a landslide. they changed the rules because winner gets all. they thought jeb bush was going to get it or marco rubio. the first poll came out and trump is leading by a lot. they said, what are we going to do? that was done so i wouldn't get any delegates. then i won in a landslide and i got all the delegates. sometimes it works to my advantage. colorado is unfortunate because they disenfranchised the voters.
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they disenfranced all these voters -- >> you're saying you don't think the rnc wants you to get the nomination? >> no, i don't. >> you think they're actively working against you. >> it's not like i see it. it's not like i have 15 miles of proof but certainly they should want to have a people of the vote of colorado. the people of colorado -- i would have won. i've won so many of the votes. the voting has been phenomenal. that's why i've won so many more states than ted cruz or kasich. >> does it say something about -- okay. you disagree with the process as it was in colorado but you had months to prepare. does it -- your critics say it says something about your leadership ability. as someone who touts themselves as an organization aal genius, that you couldn't create an organization on the ground that could beat ted cruz's organization. >> number one, i started with a $1 million loan. i built a $10 million company. it's a phenomenal company -- >> but is that the same as a lo.
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you can say what about organization? how come i'm leading by hundreds of delegates and leading by millions of votes? remember this, i was supposed to lose south carolina. i was supposed to lose to bush new hampshire. i was supposed to lose the entire south. i won virtually everything in the south. i look at your board. it's all my color, whatever that color is. i guess it's a semipurple. not the nicest color, but that's okay. but i won the entire south. i won florida. i could say they have a bad organization. cruz was supposed to win alabama, arkansas. he was supposed to win ken condition. he lost all of them. the point is, i mean, if you talk about that, i can say, well, if my organization's not so good, how come i've won many more states than him and millions of votes? >> i want to read what cory gardner, a republican senator from colorado said, because he's annoyed at what you've been saying. >> he's a member of the establishment. >> that you're insulting these delegates who ran, who are regular people -- >> i'm insulting the people. the system is not a good system. >> he says, how on earth are you
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going to defeat isis if you can't figure out the colorado gop convention? >> we can figure it out but it's stacked against us. can you have people totally against us. my people went there, great delegates, they're all over the internet burning up their republican card. >> how was it stacked against you? >> because the republican party in colorado wanted cruz or maybe they wanted somebody other than trump. i don't think anybody wants cruz. why would they want him? there's no reason to want him. but the republican party wanted somebody other than trump. the funny thing, i'm the only one that will beat hillary clinton, assuming she runs, assuming she gets out of her problem, which she probably will because that's a system that's bad, too. i'll give you another example. i'm no fan of bernie sanders. for me, forget it. every time i turn on, he's winning, he's winning. week after week, he wins, he wins. i watch you and all of the pundits and they say, but he can't win. you know why? it's stacked against him. it really is.
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it's stacked against him. in his case it's superdelegates. in my case it's the obvious. >> you said in the past if you weren't treated fairly, you would consider a third party run. that still on the table? >> it's something i don't want to do. look, i'm winning by a lot. based on the numbers you just gave me for new york, i'm leading by more than 40 poiblnt >> and everybody else flew town. you talked about new york values, like you and i and everybody else, we know about new york values when we saw with what happened with the world trade center and how incredible new york was. so i think he left town. i don't think he's coming back. i'll do great in new jersey, pennsylvania, connecticut, rhode island is great, maryland. you know, i've got a lot of states where they know me. the nice thing is, the states that know me are the ones that i really do well in. like florida. they know me in florida and i won in a landslide. >> one of the knocks on you and, i know you disagree, is you
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haven't given specifics to your policy. your campaign has been saying, last week they were saying you were going to put out specific -- >> but i have on tax. >> you're going to be making policy speeches in particular. >> i'm going start doing that, yes. >> i did that about apec about israel and met with raves. you even said it was good. i'm going to be doing probably ten over the next two months. >> do you know when the next one's going to be and what the topic -- >> i would say the next week. >> do you know what the topic will be? >> we're looking at different examples. we're looking at unity. one thing i want to discuss, it may not be policy, is unity in the republican party because i think it's very important. we're going to be talking about the military, nato. when i talked about nato last week, wolf blitzer asked me the question, what about nato? i've been building buildings all my life and dealing deals and i know about nato. i said it's obsolete. we're spending too much and everyone is ripping us off. it's obsolete because we're looking at soviet union, doesn't exist.
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russia is plenty strong. it doesn't cover terror. if it does cover terror -- >> you still say it's obsolete? >> of course. it was done 68 years ago and it hasn't changed. experts on nato look and say, trump is right. these are people that study it. >> you gave an interview to "usa today." you're looking at possible vice president picks. you did say -- you named marco rubio, john kasich, stot wacott walker. >> i said they're people i like. i've beaten them very, very harshly. walker was start to win. as soon as i started on him, he went back to wisconsin. >> and endorsed ted cruz. >> of course he did. i couldn't ask him for an endorsement. i got him out. marco the same thing, jeb the same thing. i can't imagine they like me too much. >> when you say you like them, do you like them as potential vice presidents or -- >> i like them at people.
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could they be involved in some form of the government? absolutely i think they could. i don't necessarily think for vice president. >> it's interesting because you could argue are all establish-type candidates. >> whoever you pick as vice president, is that what you would look for, somebody with political experience on the ground in washington, especially a washington player -- >> yes. >> -- who can help you with congress? >> yes. i'm a business guy. we're going to make good deals on trade. it's in my wheelhouse. it's easy for me. we'll have a strong military. we'll rebuild our military. we're going to take care of health care. i'm going to do so well with so many different thins. you don't need two like me. i want somebody that can deal with congress, that gets along with congress, that's a washington person. >> can you name one? >> i don't want to do that now. i think it's inappropriate. i think it's the wrong time. i do have people in mind. i have a lot of people that -- look, i've been dealing in politics all my life. i know most of these politicians. i have great respect. senator sessions endorsed me.
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he was supposed to endorse cruz. everybody thought -- cruz, it's his all-time respected senator. he would talk about him all the time, senator sessions. senator sessions endorsed me. i have a lot of respect for a lot of the politicians but i would want that to be a political position. >> we'll hear from his wife, daughter, and sons. that and more on the second of "a.c. 360's" republican town halls. we'll be right back.
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and we are back with donald trump and joining us his wife, melania, sons donald jr., his daughter just jumped on the stage as well, she's 8 years old. eric is with us. daughters tiffany and ivanka. welcome, great to have the whole family together like this. thanks so much. ivanka, i have to start off with you. congratulations on your baby. how is everything going? >> thank you, everything is going incredibly well. theodore is 2 weeks old as of sunday. >> are you sleeping through the night? is he sleeping through the night? >> no, not even close. not even close, but it's a blessing, so we're very happy. >> well, congratulations. that's the most important thing. >> thank you. >> i'm curious, when your dad, your husband -- i mean, how did the conversation come up? did he -- was there a family meeting like on "the brady bunch," i mean, de call each of you individually and say, you know, i'm going to do this this
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time and what did you think? >> well, i think it's such a personal decision that ultimately it was one he had to arrive to on his own, and obviously as we've all seen over the last several months it's a vicious industry politics, much more so than real estate or anything we've ever experienced, so, but we were just incredibly excited for him. i mean, we know what he's capable of. we've stood by his side for the last decade, in my case, a little bit longer in don's case, and watched him do these deals at the trump organization and we know what he can bring to the country, so we're just happy to support him. >> he's flirted with it before. did you think, okay, this time it's actually going to happen? >> i think this time we knew it. you sensed the frustration in 2008. you sensed the frustration even more so in 012. but i think we're young. he has a company, he actually employs tens of thousands of people whose live ,ple whose l i people whose live velihoods and well-being depend on the success of the company. i was 28, he's not going to say, here's a billion dollar company, leave it with us and hope the
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people who have been loyal to him for so many years will be okay. we've been in the company much longer, have the decades of experience, he can walk away knowing the people who are so good to him for that period of time are going to be taken care of and he can do what he wants to do for the country. >> melania, were you nervous for him? were you instantly, like, yes, let's do this? >> i was not nervous for him but he was thinking about it and i gave him my support. and i said to him, you need to go and run and people will take you serious. and if you run, you will win. i see how people react to him before he announced it. >> tiffany, eric, when you saw him coming down the escalator with melania, did you have any idea that it would go on this long, that it would become what it has? >> it's an amazing success story if you look at it, right, he's been in politics nine months and he's winning the republican party for president of the united states. i mean, it's really an incredible story, but to your specific question, i actually remember when you said, listen, kids, i'm going to do this.
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i'm going to hop into the race. i want to self-fund. i want to do it for the country. this is about the country. this country has given me everything. i'm going to give back. it was a powerful moment. i'll never forget that. the moment in the office together, you know, the four of us and it was a special moment for us. >> tiffany, for you, what did you think? >> whenever my father puts his heart and soul into something, he goes full force. when he finally decided to, you know, run for president, i think all of us knew, you know what, here we go. like, he -- he really just worked so hard. we knew it would be a success. i had no doubt he would get as far as he has. >> ivanka, eric, it's no surprise, i got to ask you, there was news just this week both of you were not registered to vote in the primary. what happened? >> well, i'm an independent and i've always voted based on the candidate as opposed to based on the party. and it was actually a very interesting experience. so we're not a family of politicians. we haven't been in politics very long. new york has one of the most onerous rules in terms of registration and it required us to register a long time ago,
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almost close to a year ago. and we didn't do that. we found out about it sort of after the fact. but it was actually why i started making a series of videos to educate people in each of the individual states because every state is different. most states you can register as late as the day of the actual -- >> when did you realize you weren't going to be able to vote -- >> around a week later. >> is that right? >> yeah. >> eric, how about for you? >> yeah, no, it was the same thing. we fell into the same boat. it was our first kind of foray into politics. we didn't realize how the whole system worked. it was amazing. we actually made it a very big part of the campaign and no one that's been more visible on the campaign than the two of us but we made it a very big part to get that message out. get out, register, go out, vote, here's how you do it. you know, we gave them all the tools and everything to actually go ut and figure out that process. it actually was a great educational process for us and e that probably, you know, helped the campaign a lot. >> you're seeing the turnout, by the way, so many people
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who are registering all the time. you see the people flipping sides to be able to vote for my father. that's pretty amazing. >> do you consider yourself a republican? >> yeah, i've been always. >> eric? >> very much. >> i'm registered in pennsylvania as a republican. >> ivanka, you're still an independent? >> i'm an independent. >> right. the -- what was your reaction when you found out they weren't going to be able to vote for you in the primary? >> well, i knew ivanka was an independent. i understand why she is. it's hard to be thrilled with what's going on in politics, either party if you look at what's going on. she was an independent. she's going to switch over to be republican at some point. perhaps she wants to see what's going on. but i have a feeling she'll be voting in november for me. >> that's no question. >> that's no question. >> there i can vote as an independent. >> i wanted you to meet some of the voters here. this is nicole hart. she is a technical designer from here in manhattan. she says she's leaning toward supporting you, mr. trump, but she's got a question for melania. >> hi, melania. >> hello. >> do you feel that you and mr.
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trump raised barron differently than he did his older children? >> well, it's a different time and different generation, and especially now the time is different. he's not home much. he's working hard. he's on the road all the time. and i'm at home being a parent and to be very happy when we have him home because we miss him. yes, it's a little bit different but kind of still the same. he loves to work, he loves the country. we see that, you know, he will do something amazing if people elect him to be a president. >> mr. trump, do you think you're a different dad to your youngest, to barron, than you were to your older kids? >> well, i think i appreciate it more. you know, it's very interesting, with my -- with all of the children, i've always been, i think, a very good father. was always important to me. a lot of people say my children have done a good job, and they better keep doing a good job. but they come to me, friends of mine, very successful people, and their children have problems
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with drugs and problems with alcohol and problems with a lot of things and they say, cue speak to my son, cue speak to my daughter? i'm always very honored to do that. i have so many friends that have asked me to do it. but i think now as i've gotten older, i think i appreciate the fact more. whereas before i was charging forward, we're still charging forward, but perhaps we appreciate life a little more. >> this is peggy, she works in real estate. she says her dad actually worked for your father, fred. she says she's voting for you next tuesday and she's got a question for eric. >> hi, eric, how are you? >> peggy, how are you? >> my question is -- rather, it's a statement. when i was younger, i formed a very special bond with my dad through football. we used to spend countless hours together watching games, and i wanted to know, do you have a special bond with your dad, just the two of you? >> yeah. i have many special bonds with my father. we love work. right, it's something that really brings us together. we love building. the two of us love machinery, we love building, we love concrete,
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we love jobs. we'll sit on the phone at 6:00 in the morning and talk about our favorite jobs. i think that brings a lot of fun to us and a lot to the relationship. we also love golf. you know, we go out, we play golf together, and it's just something that we really enjoy. listen, there's a lot of things. he's got a great sense of humor. he's been the greatest father in the world. he's been an amazing deal-maker. he's just always had so much love for us and his whole family. he's an amazing guy. one of my best friends in the entire world. maybe my best friend in the entire world. he's an amazing man. there's really a lot that brings it together. >> thank you so much. >> peggy was saying she worked for your dad. what was your relationship like with your dad? >> it was great. it really became much better when i hit about 20, when i graduated from the wharton school of finance and i started working, but i worked with him during summers, but it was a great relationship. >> did you always know you were going to go into this business? >> no, i wanted to be a baseball player, i wanted to make movies. i had a lot of different am bigs
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as i was growing up but ultimately i decided i'd work for my father over the summers. i was in cincinnati, ohio. i worked there. different places. i loved doing it. ultimately when i got out of school, i said this was the right thing to do. we were in brooklyn. we had an office in brooklyn. we had buildings in brooklyn and queens. and i always wanted to go into manhattan. i used to look across the river and see the big buildings and it was something that always intrigued me. i had a great relationship with my father. probably even better when i worked with him. >> this is lilian ortiz over here. she's an attorney from suffolk county, new york. she says she's planning on voting for you but has a question for tiffany. lilian? >> tiffany, good evening to you all. >> good evening. >> what do you most admire about your dad? >> i think i've grown up seeing him such a mentor. his hard work ethic is truly inspiring. whenever i'm, you know, at school studying these long hours, i see him on tv without any sleep and making these speeches and has -- just makes me want to continue to work
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harder and prove myself and keep on pushing to my limit. >> thank you. >> tiffany, your mom revealed just recently that you had your first job interview. i don't know that you wanted her to reveal that. how did it go? >> i think pretty well. you know, i -- >> were you nervous? >> i think everyone's nervous, graduating college, finding your first job. i think i can understand and resonate with a lot of other college graduates at this time. you know, this is the first time you're out in the world on your own. so, luckily, i have a supportive family, jared, ivanka's husband, my father and my mother have been so supportive. we'll see what happens. >> what has it been like watching your dad on the political arena? >> it's been amazing. i think, it's a once-in-a lifetime opportunity truly to be able to be the daughter of somebody running for the president, election. no one really has that opportunity. it's an education in and of itself. >> yeah. i want you to meet arlene tang, she's over here. she's a physician. she says she's undecided.
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she's got a question for you, mr. trump. arlene? >> good evening, mr. trump. i was wondering do you talk to your wife and children the same way that you speak at the gop debates? >> the same way? [ laughter ] i think i'm much nicer to them. i will say, you know, you talk about the debates, i never knew about debating. my whole life has been sort of a debate, but the politicians, they debate every night. i didn't know how that was really going to work out. and the debates, i love the debates. i really had fun with them. i think i've done well with them. i guess i -- i was the center stage every single debate. and i've really enjoyed it, but i will tell you, i speak to my wife and children much, much differently and -- but it has been an interesting process. they're always saying, be nicer on the debates. i say, they're coming at me from all these different angles, how can i be nice? but melania in particular would say, be nicer in the debates. i say, i can't do that. i have to win first. but we'll be nice. >> what do you say to them? because i think i saw,
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mr. trump, you saying on the campaign trail both melania and also ivanka were telling you to be more presidential. how would you like him to be different? >> just to use nice language. >> better language. >> better language. >> i know you -- >> not all the time. sometimes i agree with it. >> somebody yelled at something at one of his rallies, you were upset at that. >> yes. and i was thinking, just don't repeat it because the next day the press all they will talk about is the word, inappropriate word, and that was correct. so -- >> ivanka, what have you said to him about being presidential? >> well, i think one of the interesting things about this process is it's very easy to have an opinion auto things but when you're not in the arena, you know, it's a different ball game. i've definitely said things of that kind to him but i also then watch these debates and it's a hard thing to observe because i see them, it's like a cage match. you know, they're jumping on him. they're hitting him from the left. hitting him from the right. everyone's attacking him because he's been the front-runner for so long.
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it's -- he's the man to take down. so while i do sometimes tell him to withhold some of that sort of fire, i also understand it and i think it's instinct, and i think it also speaks to his passion and i think that's ultimately what we need. i mean, you have to have tremendous stamina to get through this process. you have to have a fire and a passion. i don't think you can be particularly laid back and make it through this whole experience from what i've observed. especially when you're competing against many very qualified people who are quite upset by the fact that you've logged past them. >> you still talked about changing your tone from time to time, maybe even soon. do you think that's actually going to happen? because a lot of people are saying, look, you've been talking about that for a while. >> sure. >> maybe he's not actually capable of changing. >> i'm very capable of doing it. it's easy to do it. i mean, it's easier to do it than the way i behave right now. >> so, why not? >> because i have two more people i have to take out.
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[ laughter ] and when i take them out, i will be so presidential you won't believe it. then, of course, i'll start on hillary and then i'll be a little less presidential. but assuming i win, i will be very, very -- the country will be very proud of me and we will make america great again. you know, my whole thing is make america great again. >> i haven't heard that. >> it's so important to me. i know. but it's just so important to me because we have such potential and we're not using our potential. and we're being scoffed at and laughed at by the world. whether it's trade, whether it's paying for other countries' military and not being properly reimbursed. it's so sad what's happening to our country. that's why we have $19 trillion in debt. it's going up to $22 trillion in debt quickly because of the horrible budget deal that was just made. so, i'll be very presidential at the right time. >> this is alan hedrick, a real estate agent, who says he's leaning toward supporting you. he has a question for ivanka. >> hi, ivanka. you and chelsea clinton are personal friends. has the campaign put a strain on your friendship?
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and with both you and chelsea working on your prospective parents' campaigns, is there a common ground where you guys can kind of find an issue to agree on? and do you think you'll still be friends with her after this election cycle? >> well, look, we're children and we love our parents so that's the great equalizer and that's the great common ground, so i'm incredibly proud of my father. i'm amazed and truly in awe of what he's accomplished and what he's accomplished throughout the course of his life up until this point. but, you know, the last ten months have really been a whole different level. so, i think that she would probably say the same about her mother, so she's probably very proud of her mother. and we certainly would share that, i would think. >> this is mitchell bernstein, he's an i.t. director from brookhaven, new york, he says he's leaning toward supporting you. he has a question for all the the women on the stage. mitchell? >> yes.
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you're probably aware that the media's gone after your father on several occasions regarding women in general. and i was wondering how you felt about how the media has treated him, how he's presented himself and what you can do in general to improve the relationship and to provide information about how your relationship with your father is in regards to women in general. >> well, i think the facts speak for themselves. i have witnessed these incredible female role models that he's employed in the highest executive positions at the trump organization my entire life. and an industry that has been dominated by men, is still dominated by men but certainly was when he was starting out in his career and he was employing some of these women and raising them through the ranks. so, you know, for me, i think the way he raised me, the way he raised tiffany, it's a testament to the fact that he believes in inspiring women, empowering women. he always taught me there wasn't
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anything i couldn't do if i set my mind to it, if i had deep passion, if i really unearth what it is that i wanted to do with my life then worked very hard to achieve it and i don't think that's the message a father would relay to a daughter who he didn't believe had the potential to accomplish exactly what her brothers could. so, you know, for me, it's his actions speak louder than the words of many politicians who talk about gender equality, but it's not evidenced in their daily employment practices. so i think both at the trump organization and also in a more personal capacity, the type of father he was to a daughter, to daughters, i think evidences how he feels about our gender in general. >> tiffany? >> i think my father, since i've been a little girl, has always just inspired me and had so much faith in me to just be the best person i can be, the best woman i can be. every time i speak to him on the phone whether it be at school, when i'm with him in his office
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in palm beach, it's just, he wants us to do the best and he has the utmost faith that we can accomplish whatever we set our minds to just as well as men, if not better and we're such strong, hard workers. i mean, ivanka, of course, melania, i just truly feel my father is the best father, the best husband that he could be, truly. >> melania? >> he treats everyone equally. so if you're woman and he attacks -- they attack him, he will attack back. no matter who you are. we're all human and he treats them equal as men, so i think that's very important. he doesn't make a difference. and he encourage everybody, man or a woman. >> thank you for your question. we're going to take one more short break. back with the trump family right after this. is better for your skin than wearing no makeup at all?
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back now with more questions for donald trump, his wife, sons, and daughters. thanks very much for doing this. one of the questions i asked governor kasich and his wife yesterday about his daughters, i want to ask you, melania, which is, do you monitor your son's social media? it's obviously a question that a lot of parents are concerned about given all the things that go on. so, do you watch your son's social media mrens? >> he has an iphone. he's not on social media yet. he's 10 years old. i think it's too early to be on social media. he's talking about instagram i will go into it when i think it's the right age. it's a hard decision to make.
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i grew up without social media. it was in one way better because i see a lot of bullying kids going on and we need to protect our children. we need to watch over them. >> it seems like bullying just used to be in schools but now because it's social media, it's 24 hours a day, it reaches into the home as well. >> you don't really know. you need to check on your children and talk to them and have conversation with them, but it's very important to be close parent and kind of on top of them but still let them be who they are. >> i got to ask you guys, do you monitor your dad's social media? >> impossible task. >> i have no idea what you're talking about, anderson. >> are there some days you wake up and look at twitter and you think, really? >> it kind of makes him the person he is, honestly. it's so great to not see the sound bites, the traditional politician sound bites you read too often. i mean, he's so authentic.
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he writes the tweets himself. he doesn't have a team of hundreds and hundreds of people behind him. i think that's what makes him the great candidate he is. >> the retweets. >> the retweets get you in trouble. >> the tweets are fine. the retweets get a little shaky. >> they're running focus groups, how do we word this so we tell everyone what they want to hear? but then when it comes time to actually deliver, they do whatever the special interests are telling him to do. his is really genuine. it's that fight, that spirit that the american peek see that is lacking in today's politician where they just go with the wind. >> you don't have to retweet people. you can just let it stand. >> you know what's interesting, i started off a number of years ago, and i now see that over the weekend i picked up, like, almost 100,000 people. and i have 7.5 million, 7.6 million people there. i have almost 7.5 million people on facebook. i have 1.5 million on instagram. i have millions.
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and it's really an asset. i really enjoy it but it's an asset. you see what's going on. there is some genius there. i mean, you will get -- you will read some of the stuff, there's genius there. you have to find the right genius. but it is a powerful thing. i mean -- >> as president, though -- >> no, i wouldn't be doing it. >> you wouldn't. >> or, i would do it very little. it's different. but right now if i'm fighting one of my opponents, i can tweet out things or my feelings. i had it on cnn. i mean, there was one instance i was at a town hall and somebody got up and made a pretty negative statement about the president. you probably remember, very negative. they never found out who this guy was. was he a setup or what? i think you know what i'm talking about. >> yeah. >> he made a negative statement about the president and they said i didn't defend him. it was a big deal. i remember i tweeted one line and then another line and i put it out. and it broke into cnn. they broke into this major broadcast, donald trump, breaking news. it's like, i'm sitting, i there just did this and it totally solved the problem. it doesn't all work badly, but it is a modern method of
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communication and, you know, when i have 16 million or 17 million people when you add it up, it gives me a big advantage -- >> do you write all your own tweets? >> i would say yes. >> when somebody writes from your account, you retweet it from your account, you've retweeted -- >> i'd say, yes, other than if we release some information, i have people, dan, and other people who will do it. >> do you actually sit there and type or sit there -- >> during the day, i'm in the office, i just shout it out to one of the young ladies. i have tremendous office staff. meredith and some of the people that work for me. and i'll just shout it out and they'll do it. but during the evenings after 7:00 or so, i will always do it by myself. >> melania, do you ever want to say to him, put the mobile device down? that, like, it's 2:00 a.m. and you're still tweeting. >> if he would only listen. i did many times. and i just say, okay, do whatever you want. he's an adult. he knows the consequences. and -- >> let's meet more voters. this is andrew, he's a small businessowner who says he's
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leaning toward voting for you, mr. trump. he's got a question for donald jr. andrew? >> hi. definitely got my vote. >> oh, good. thank you. that was good. that was good. thank you. >> i admire how you guys being in the public eye remain more grounded and became so successful. compliment you, father on that, and your mom, obviously. and my question is when your parents were getting divorced, how did your father help you get through that? >> well, listen, i don't think it was an easy time. it was obviously a difficult time to go through for any young kid. i was 12 years old. so, you're at that stage in life where you think you're a man but you're not quite. so, you know, it was certainly a difficult thing. but i think throughout our lives he's always been there. it's usually been on his terms. it wasn't a typical, let's go play catch in the backyard father/son relationship. we always went to job sites with him. we'd be in his office playing with trucks as a 6-year-old while he's negotiating deals with presidents of major companies. available.ays made himself i remember calling from school, from boarding school and from getting home from school when we were younger.
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he'd pick up the phone and say, jack welsh is in the office, say hi, don. because we were always present, he was always available. because we always were -- on his terms, at job sites, it really instilled a work ethic and a value for the business that we're in that it just -- it's what we grew up in, what we understood. when it came time to start running the business and go in there, it was a very natural progression. so, i always joke, i've been working with the company for 38 years because he set that up. and it was that work ethic and that foundation that he implanted that allows us to probably do what it is we do today. so, you know, it's really all him. >> eric, i saw an interview you gave, i can't remember if it's a print interview, where you said the divorce actually brought you closer to your siblings. >> yeah, i think that's right. don is my best friend, ivanka is my best friend. we're inseparable with tiffany. i mean, we have an amazing relationship. they is contrived. we work together every day, have offices next to each other. we also vacation together. kai spends a weekend at my house, we watched "frozen" together. right, kai? she insisted sitting on my lap
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because she got the shy gene, obviously. we have a great time as a father. my father and mother did a great job at was actually protecting us from the media, really protecting us from the media during those times and we grew up. as we started gaining a little bit of that iron shield, we became more visible. now you see us by his side every single day. it's something we love doing because we truly love the man to death. we really love our father and our whole family. >> i want to you to meet sherry murray. she is currently undecided. she has a question for melania. >> thank you. mr. trump, you have a bunch beautiful family. i'm a mom, as well, my daughter, shyla, and two sons, abel and jace. i wanted to know what you love most about being a mom, melania, and also, are you guys interested in having more kids? >> well, it's amazing every day. our son is 10 years old and everything is different. every day it's, you know, something special. and it's unconditional love and
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i enjoy every day. i love being mom. very special time. and i'm at home and raising him, teaching him values and morals and preparing him for adult life because sooner or later he will have wings to fly and i will be always there for him, but he will be very independent and ready to go. >> anymore kids? >> we're not really thinking about -- >> ivanka, my mom has been pressuring me to actually have kids. what's being a mom meant to you, how has it changed you? >> i think it's changed me in almost every capacity. i think it's made me a better person, a better wife. i think i'm much more empathetic. once you start thinking about a bigger picture outside of yourself, which it's easy to be very self-centered when you're young and you're single, and obviously it started when i got married and i became a we. then having kids brings it to a whole different level. putting them first and they
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become very much the center of your universe. >> just seems exhausting. >> it is. and it's exhausting. >> it is. >> it's really -- it's the most amazing type of challenge you really can't prepare yourself for, but it's so unbelievably rewarding. i feel so fortunate. i have three children now under the age of 4 1/2. >> wow. >> and it's exhausting, but it's the perfect kind of chaos. >> i want you to meet joseph cohen, he's a student at columbia university. says he's undecided. he has a question for ivanka. joseph? >> first, i wanted to congratulate you on the birth of your son. >> thank you. >> how did your father react to you converting to judaism? how did you come to that decision? >> it's such a personal decision. i tend not to talk about it in a public forum. my father is very supportive. he knows me and he knows -- he trusts my judgment. when i make decisions, i make
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them in a well-reasoned way. i don't rush into things. so i appreciate the support he gave me because obviously these decisions are not taken lightly. and it would have been much more hard if i had had headwinds, but he believes in me. he loves my husband. they're incredibly close, which i think was obviously helpful. of me in that decision, as in many others that i've taken throughout the years. >> thanks for your question. this is britney, she's a student at the fashion institute of technology. she says she's undecided. she's got a question basically for all the kids. >> hi. so how intimidating was it to introduce your significant others initially to your father? >> well, i don't think that any of us necessarily got the shy gene. there's not a lot of shy in our family. so i think we're all pretty self-confident, so i think it made it relatively easy but it was probably a unique experience for all of us, but, you know, he's been just incredible now,
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always has been as a father but even as a grandfather. i have five kids of my own and my wife is a stay-at-home mom, takes care of all five of them. her job is a lot tougher than mine. we have a pretty tough job. but it's amazing. and he's just so incredibly supportedtive of that as well. and just seeing him as a grandfather, i mean, i wish something that people could see because it is amazing. it's a side of him you wouldn't see. it's not something we talk about all that often, but it's just incredible. watching him with kai on the golf course or any other situation, it's just pretty amazing. there may have been some intimidation initially but he trusts us pretty well. >> i remember spying on the lunch that my husband and my father had in trump tower. >> somehow did you spy on it? >> i was riding around columns. jared called, they went downstairs. they were having a beautiful lunch. there was a tremendous amount of hand gestures. i didn't know if this was good or bad. but i was -- obviously, when you
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love somebody so much, you hope that the people in your lives that you love love one another. >> do you remember that? squlo high stakes. >> i do remember that. very happy with jared. he's been a fantastic -- all of, you know, eric did so well and don did so well and tiffany's working on it. ivanka. we are happy with the new members of the family. they've been fantastic. >> it's got to be intimidating, tiffany, bringing somebody or even considering that. >> my father trusts us and our opinions and melania spent multiple dinners with my boyfriend now. i think in the end we're independent people and all he can do is just support us and be a loving father and, you know, really hope that we're taken care of as well. >> if it's not good, the older brothers will get involved. >> is that right? >> no problem. enforcement. >> okay. >> high school was rough for me in that regard. >> yeah? >> there may have been a couple instances. >> is that right? >> one or two. >> they're very protective. >> this is joseph kovac from
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staten island. he's undecided. he's leaning toward you, mr. trump. he's got a question for donald jr. >> first of all, mr. trump, i respect you tremendously. >> thank you. >> as a businessman and more importantly, as a father. and you swayed me tonight, first of all. >> oh, good. thank you. >> my question for you, don, is what have you learned as the greatest experience as a businessman from your father? and do you think that sometimes tone is important and you get more with honey than vinegar, so to sneak? >> i think without question, i mean, you know, what's interesting throughout this process, everyone talks about that tone. but there also comes a time where you actually have to put the hammer down. >> right. >> there comes a time being nice, trying to do all this stuff, when people are laughing at your face, have you to actually fight back. you know, that's what's so important about what he does. he's not just going to go -- every time there's a change in the winds he's going to flip. that's not what he does. he's going to fight for the american people. tone is important. i've seen him do that for the 38
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years i've been working in the company, i've seen him do dpeelz with people from all over the world, different backgrounds, different ethnicities, everything, different personalities. no one can be more endearing. he wins everyone over with that, when the time is right. but we're at a stage in our country where i think we all believe, you know, we really need change. we need politicians who have real world experience. people who go to work for the people. the biggest joke i see is all the politicians talk about how they're great public servants. they're serving himself. he doesn't need that at this stage in his life but he wants to give back to the country that's been so great to him. it's given him so many opportunities, whether it be family or business. he wants to go through this brutal process to be able to give back. i mean, he's truly -- it's incredibly selfless and incredible to see and i think it's resonating with the people. >> is there one business lesson that sticks out in particular? >> there's so much. there's not a guy that sits down on your knee and says, this is
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how you do business. you learn often times. he'll let you make the miss fay and you pay for it. he follows up on it. he'll lets you run with it. you better be right, if not you'll hear about it forever. >> this is pax hart, he's an engineering sfunt. >> we know you lost your brother from alcoholism at age 43, i lost a sister from alcoholism at age 37. it's a life-change event and you really have to take stock in your life. >> right. >> my question is, how did you -- we've seen so many -- the children of so many wealthy people who have, you know, they've ended up being a mess. how did you instill with your kids, how did you protect them, how did you instill a sense of personal responsibility with them and what advice would you
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give for parents whose children may be struggling with addiction? >> it's such an important question and a great question. i had a brother who was a fantastic guy. i talked about this to anderson once. because you had some difficulty -- >> yeah, my brother killed himself. >> right. very similar nature. and my brother was this phenomenally handsome guy. great guy. just great in every way. the best personality, everything. but he started drinking. and it became a real problem for him. and he used to tell me -- he was quite a bit older. he would tell me, don't drink. don't smoke. you have to add the word drug. and he would really -- you know, he knew he had a problem. and he was one of my truly great teachers. my father and my brother, i say that all the time. my brother because of this and other things, but would say don't ever drink, don't ever drink. i've never had a drink. i've never had a glass of alcohol. and yet i own the largest winery in the east coast. it's a crazy thing but that's okay. but my brother was so
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instrumental in probably shaping my life because i just don't know what the outcome would have been. when my children were growing up, even when they didn't know what drinking was, i would say, no alcohol, no cigarettes, and no drugs. i'd always say it. i added cigarettes because i have friends that just can't kick it. i would say, no alcohol, no drugs, no cigarettes. and, you know, i think it had an impact. i have so many friends where their children have this problem. it's a tough world out there to start off. but when you have that as an additional problem, the drugs or the alcohol, it's awfully tough to really do it. so, i just tell the parents, if you can, keep your children away from the drugs and the alcohol. and it's going to make their life so much easier. you know, you don't have that long -- i don't have it any longing. i never drank so i don't have a longing for drinking or drugs. i have other problems. we won't talk about them. but the drugs and alcohol, so important your children just stay away from it. >> is that something you remember distinctly growing up?
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>> very much so. >> every day of our life, every morning. don't drink, don't do drugs -- >> every morning? >> every morning before school, without fail. >> as young children it was often accompanied with one of us eye-rolling. in retrospect we see how much of an important message that was. >> dad y don't say that anymore. but i see how important that was because i've seen so many brilliant young children of parents destroyed because they drank or took drugdz. >> i want to you meet diane morgan, a teacher in manhattan who says she's supporting governor kasich. she has a question for you, mr. trump. >> mr. trump, good evening. thank you for answering my question. i'm a mom of three here in new york, ethan, jane, and laura. i'm wondering what do you consider the two or three most important financial principles to teach your children or that you've taught your children? >> well, i've always said, and i make speeches on this, and they pay me a lot of money, and i give it to charities. i'm so happy about it.
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i love doing it. but i always say, have you to love what you do. it's so important. can you never, ever give up. i've seen so many people where they have talent and they're very smart and i see it even in schools where i went to school, some of the people that weren't really as smart as other people are much more successful now because they were just more driven and they never ever quit or gave up. and keep the momentum going. but, you have to love what you do. you know, if you're in a great business, the real estate business has been a great business, but if my children like some other business that wasn't maybe as good a business but they just loved, it i would absolutely tell them to pursue that because you'll never be happy. have you to love what you do. >> i want to ask just in closing to each of the kids, and i hate to call you kids, but -- >> i'll take it. >> makes me feel younger. is there something you have learned about your dad in the course of this campaign that you didn't know or that you -- i don't know. yeah, that you didn't know. >> i think it's an amazing
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question because we've seen so much. just the perseverance. we knew it was always there, but going into something as a freshman politician and being the star of the super bowl right now, it's pretty incredible. i think it's not so much that i learned anything new, i just reinforced what i knew. just the hardest working guy i've ever seen. i mean, you know, it's just the drive, the work ethic that we've seen our whole lives. it's just been reinforced at this stage. after everything he's done and to keep doing this, and want to do this for the country, it's really amazing. it's really special. >> i would say passion. it's amazing, he came into this race with so much passion. he put everything into it. kids, take on the company. run the company. go what you've done so well. i'm going to go do this for the country. he puts so much passion into it. i've seen him do that, building the greatest building in the world, the "apprentice," now running for president. he has an unbelievable ability
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to turn things into gold. it's largely due to passion. you >> he never gives up. he's works harder and harder opinion and he's able to balance everything he's doing on the campaign trail with his business and also taking care of us and being such app amazing father. i think having those two qualities and us receiving so much love from him, even when he's so busy is an amazing quality to have. >> i think one of the things i've always been most inspired by in observing my father is the way that he really inspires others, the way at our company, at the trump organization, he will set a very aggressive, a very bold vision and then really help people find it, help people both unearth their own potential and also work together to achieving the vision that he's charted for the company. and i think watching h o
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