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Sarah Palin officially endorses Donald Trump for president

The former Alaska governor remains very popular with some conservatives

David Usborne
Ames
,Andrew Buncombe
Tuesday 19 January 2016 13:16 EST
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Sarah Palin announced her backing for Mr Trump at an event in Iowa
Sarah Palin announced her backing for Mr Trump at an event in Iowa (Twitter)

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A large cattle shed attached to the University of Iowa became the setting for the latest twist in the already strange story of Donald Trump's run for the White House after the tycoon received the backing of Sarah Palin.

After a day of mounting speculation, the Republicans’ 2008 vice presidential candidate, made her appearance in person at an evening campaign event and confirmed she was was backing the tycoon and frontrunner.

“I’m in it to win it,” Ms Palin said, standing next to Mr Trump, who stood and grinned. “He is going rogue left and right,” she said, harkening back to a description she tried to own when running for Vice President in 2008.

She emphasised the promise of Mr Trump especially as Commander-in-Chief and protector of America against its enemies, notably Iran. “We are ready for a change, and our troops deserve the best, a new commander-in-chef, whose track record of success proves he is the master of the art of the deal.”

Galloping on, she went on: “He is beholden to no one but we the people, how refreshing he is. No more pussyfooting around, our troops deserve the better.

Mr Trump concluded the event by saying, that he knew if he was going to become president, he had to have the support of "Sarah".

Speculation has been growing about the identity of the special guest since Mr Trump told New Hampshire voters on Monday that he would be getting a “big endorsement” on Tuesday.

Ms Palin, the Republicans’ 2008 vice presidential candidate, had backed Ted Cruz’s campaign for the senate. Yet she has repeatedly praised Mr Trump during his White House run, especially over his recent proposal to suspend the admission of Muslim refugees to the US.

She said last month: “What a nice problem to have if it came down to Cruz and Trump.”

Though Ms Palin was a deeply controversial choice to be Senator John McCain's running mate in 2008, she remains hugely popular among some groups of American conservatives. She is a favourite of the pro-small government Tea Party community within the party, the same constituency Mr Cruz has been seeking to appeal to.

Indeed, speculation that the former Alaska governor was going to endorse Mr Trump intensified when a senior aide to Mr Cruz said he would be “deeply disappointed” if she did so.

Mr Cruz communications director, Rick Tyler, was asked on CNN whether such an endorsement would be a blow to the senator’s campaign.

“I think it would be a blow to Sarah Palin, because Sarah Palin has been a champion of the conservative cause and if she was going to endorse Donald Trump, sadly she would be endorsing someone who's held progressive views all their life on the sanctity of life, on marriage, on partial-birth abortion,

"She supported the TARP bailout - it goes on and on and on,” said Mr Tyler.

“Donald Trump claims he’s changed all those views. But I think if it was Sarah Palin, let me just say I would be deeply disappointed.”

Earlier on Tuesday, Mr Trump stopped off at the John Wayne Birthplace Museum, where he received another endorsement, that one from the film actor’s daughter.

The backing of Aissa Wayne was announced in front of a life-size, gun-toting model of the actor in full cowboy gear. Ms Wayne says the country needs a strong and courageous leader like her father and that her father would back Mr Trump if he were still alive.

“I only met him once. He was amazing,” said Mr Trump. “He said some things to me that were very special.”

Mr Trump said the actor represented strength and power, things that the American people are looking for.

He added: “We have exactly the opposite from John Wayne right now in this country.”

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