Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump did not have to try too hard to seduce Sunday a group of motorcyclists war veterans who came to listen to Washington, as part of the commemoration of the day in the United States of fallen soldiers.
"I will protect the smallest part of the Second Amendment" on the right to bear arms, Trump said before several thousand people gathered at the Lincoln Memorial.
"We need to rebuild our army" and "take care of our veterans," Trump also said in a speech about fifteen minutes that was applauded by motorcyclists, dressed in their traditional jeans and leather jackets.
Shortly before the intervention of Trump intervened Jack Bellamy, 41, an ex-marine and motorcycle Northern Virginia, who said he was delighted with the deference toward billionaire ex-combatants.
"The other candidates not do anything for veterans," he said. "We want to get rid of the politicians" who "do not listen to the people" and "put someone else in power".
Trump also questioned the government's decision to Barack Obama on access to bathrooms and locker rooms in the school system according to the genre he has chosen each person and not by sex with which has been identified at birth.
"This is ridiculous, are trying to make us swallow it," claimed Trump, who concluded his phrase stating: "A man is a man and a woman is a woman," amid applause.
The meeting brings together war veterans motorcyclists began in 1988 and is made to coincide with Memorial Day, the national day in memory of the soldiers who died for the United States.
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