Washington: Controversial Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump has alleged that countries like China and India are taking away jobs from the US and vowed to bring them back for Americans.


COMMERCIAL BREAK
SCROLL TO CONTINUE READING

Trump made the remarks while predicting that he will earn a "tremendous amount" of support from African-Americans.


"You are seeing the stories when African-American leaders are saying, 'my people really like Trump' because I am going to bring jobs back from China, from Mexico, Japan and Vietnam and India...And all these places that are taking our jobs and I'am going to bring back jobs," he told CNN.


"I'm going to do great with the African-Americans. African-American youth is 58 per cent unemployed. African- Americans in their prime are substantially worse off than the whites in their prime, and it's a very sad situation," the 69-year-old said.


Trump, known for being openly critical of many countries like China, Mexico and Japan in many of his speeches, had last month said India is "doing great" but no one talks about it.


Trump has a number of real estate interests in India.


His remarks yesterday came after his emphatic victory in the South Carolina primary. The victory gave him two wins and one second-place finish in the first three primaries and consolidated his front-runner billing.


 Trump also predicted that the presidential contest will be between him and Hillary Clinton and they will bring out the "greatest turnout" in US history.


"Frankly, if she (Clinton) gets indicted, that's the only way she's going to be stopped. I think it's going to be Hillary and myself," the real estate mogul said.


"They say it will be the largest voter turnout in the history of United States elections...We have such a low voter turnout compared to a lot of other countries so I think it will be the greatest voter turnout in history. If its Hillary against me, that is going to be a tremendous turnout...I am gonna win," Trump said.


The former reality TV star said he expects to win enough delegates to clinch the Republican nomination before the party's convention in July.


"I don't think we're going to have a convention, a brokered convention. I think it's unlikely. I think I'm doing better than that," he said.


Trump also laid out his own road map to general election victory, pinpointing two states -- Michigan and New York -- that he said he would sweep into the Republican column.


"I'll win states that aren't in play. I'll win states that Republicans don't even think of," Trump said.