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Donald Trump, his face red with emotion, lashed out at rivals Jeb Bush and Ted Cruz, on Saturday, at the most acrimonious debate to date between Republican presidential candidates, shouting insults and casting aside a pledge to be more measured.
The New York billionaire went into the CBS debate with a head of steam, having won New Hampshire last Tuesday and holding a big lead in polls in South Carolina a week before Republicans vote on February 20.
Rather than play it safe, Trump responded to every comment levelled his way, interrupted his opponents at will and called them liars repeatedly in an emotional outburst that could raise more questions about whether he has the temperament to serve in the White House.
He made his most blistering attacks against Jeb and his brother, former President George W. Bush, who has many admirers in the Republican establishment.
It was hard to declare a winner in the debate amid the constant volley of insults, not all of them from Trump. Cruz and fellow Senator Marco Rubio also took pointed jabs at each other over illegal immigration.
But Trump dominated the debate on Twitter with 40 percent of the mentions, according to data from the micro-blogging platform.
Trump was quickly goaded when Bush criticised Trump’s past statements that Russia has a role to play in Syria. Russia, Bush said, is not attacking Islamic State militants but instead helping Syrian President Bashir Assad, who Washington wants to leave power.
Trump blasted Bush’s brother for launching the Iraq war in 2003 over claims, later proven false, that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction.
“A big, fat mistake,” said Trump, noting that the September 11, 2001, attacks had also occurred on Bush’s watch.
Many in the crowd booed Trump and the Republican front-runner dismissed them as “lobbyists and special interests” supporting the former Florida governor.
Bush, who has wilted in the past under assault from Trump, stood firm this time. He will campaign with his brother George, on Monday, in North Charleston, South Carolina.
“She should be running,” Trump responded.
Bush provoked another outburst from Trump by saying the Republican nominee should be someone “who doesn’t brag, for example, that he has been bankrupt four times.”
“That’s another lie,” Trump said. “I never went bankrupt.”
Trump also was drawn into a fight with Cruz over whether the real estate developer is sufficiently conservative. Trump called himself a “common-sense conservative,” which Cruz dismissed.
“If Donald Trump is president he will appoint liberals to the Supreme Court,” Cruz said.
“You are the biggest liar,” Trump said sharply.
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