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Trump Cancels Trip To Miami After Dallas Shootings

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WASHINGTON (CBSMiami/AP) — Donald Trump has cancelled his trip to Miami - a trip meant to woo the Hispanic community.

Just after 8:30 a.m., Trump's campaign issued a statement saying, "The Trump Campaign has canceled the trip to Miami, Florida today, due to the tragic events in Dallas last night. A statement from Mr. Trump will soon follow."

Trump had planned to deliver a speech titled "Succeeding Together" in the afternoon at the DoubleTree Hotel Miami Airport & Convention Center. It was scheduled to take place in Miami-Dade County - home to the largest Cuban-American population in the U.S. It was the only one of Florida's 67 counties that Trump lost in the state's March 15th primary, an outcome that underscores the billionaire businessman's deep unpopularity among Hispanic voters.

Before the speech, Trump was scheduled to meet with local politicians and fundraisers. He was also scheduled to visit Cuban American landmark Cafe Versailles. All of those events were cancelled.

The trip comes after Trump made it clear in a Thursday visit to Capitol Hill that he's of no mind to change his brash approach to the campaign. In a series of meetings with Republican lawmakers, he blamed the media for stumbles that continue to alarm party leaders and excite Democrats with early voting scheduled to start in less than three months.

The New Yorker repeatedly called for party unity, but he also threatened several critics on a day that was designed to rally anxious Republicans behind him. Arizona Sen. Jeff Flake declined to address reports that Trump threatened to attack him politically during a testy exchange that Sen. John McCain said "everybody was talking about."

"I'll just leave it," Flake told reporters. "My position remains, I want to support the nomination. I really do. I just can't support him given the things that he's said."

There was a more cooperative tone inside Trump's meeting with House Republicans, even if skeptical lawmakers didn't necessarily hear all of what they were hoping for.

"There was no talk of pivoting. There was no talk of changing his style or anything like that," said Rep. Peter King of New York. "I think you have to expect that you're going to get Donald Trump. But he showed today that he could be Donald Trump and still work with Republicans."

Trump's mission Friday was to show he can work to win over Hispanic voters. His declaration in his campaign announcement that Mexico was sending rapists and criminals into the U.S., along with his vows to build a wall along the Southern border and deport all of the estimated 11 million people living in the country illegally have alienated Latino voters nationwide. They make up almost a quarter of the Florida electorate.

"It's really the only swing electorate left in the state — and it's growing," said Florida pollster Fernand Amandi. "That is very bad news for Donald Trump right now."

Four years ago, President Barack Obama edged out GOP nominee Mitt Romney in Florida, largely on the strength of his support among Cuban-Americans — a group that has historically favored the GOP.

But Amandi, whose research spans the state's diverse demographic spectrum, said Trump appears to be underperforming usual Republican benchmarks in the Cuban community as its GOP loyalties are softening. A group that represents people living in the country illegally asked the restaurant hosting Trump on Friday to rescind the invitation.

"The Cuban electorate is not immune to the Trump backlash," Amandi said. "They see, hear and react to the same sort of comments that other Hispanics do, and many view his comments as racist. They are policies they are simply not comfortable supporting."

Trump may have compounded the problem in February, when he questioned Cubans' favored status in U.S. immigration law that allows Cubans who set foot on American soil to stay and obtain legal status.

"I don't think that's fair. I mean, why would that be a fair thing?" he told the Tampa Bay Times. "You know, we have a system now for bringing people into the country, and what we should be doing is we should be bringing people who are terrific people who have terrific records of achievement, accomplishment."

Supporters, however, argue Trump can grow his support among Hispanic voters. He is "making an argument about economic security and the safety of your families. That appeals to everyone," said Deborah Tamargo, the Republican chairwoman in Hillsborough, who is the granddaughter of immigrants.

Legal immigrants and the children of immigrants, she added, "appreciate that he's speaking the truth" about illegal immigration.

Click here to read more about Campaign 2016.

(TM and © Copyright 2016 CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO and EYE Logo TM and
Copyright 2016 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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