Donald Trump: 'I do regret' some caustic campaign statements

US billionaire Donald Trump has admitted for the first time that he regrets some of the caustic comments he has made during his presidential election campaign.

Donald Trump: 'I do regret' some caustic campaign statements

US billionaire Donald Trump has admitted for the first time that he regrets some of the caustic comments he has made during his presidential election campaign.

"Sometimes in the heat of debate and speaking on a multitude of issues, you don't choose the right words or you say the wrong thing. I have done that," the Republican nominee, reading from a prepared text, said at a rally in Charlotte, North Carolina, on Thursday night.

"And believe it or not, I regret it - and I do regret it - particularly where it may have caused personal pain."

Mr Trump did not specify what comments he was referring to, but he added: "Too much is at stake for us to be consumed with these issues."

It was a rare admission for a man who has said he prefers "not to regret anything" and it underscores the dire situation he finds himself in.

With just 80 days left until the election, Mr Trump is trailing Democratic rival Hillary Clinton in opinion polls in most key battleground states.

At the same time, party leaders have conceded they may divert resources away from the presidential contest in favour of vulnerable Senate and House candidates if things do not improve.

Mr Trump's remarks came a day after he announced that he was overhauling his campaign operation, bringing in a new chief executive and appointing a new campaign manager. Rarely do presidential campaigns wait to advertise, or undergo such leadership tumult, at such a late stage of the general election.

Yet Mr Trump has struggled badly in recent weeks to offer voters a consistent message, overshadowing formal policy speeches with a steady stream of self-created controversies, including a public feud with an American Muslim family whose son was killed while serving in the US military in Iraq.

Mr Trump's decision to appoint Stephen Bannon, a combative conservative media executive, as his new campaign chief suggested to some that he might continue the divisive rhetoric which has angered minorities and alienated large swaths of the general election electorate.

Instead, a new Trump emerged on Thursday: a less combative, more inclusive candidate who said he was running to be the "voice for every forgotten part of this country that has been waiting and hoping for a better future" and for those who "don't hear anyone speaking for them".

And the changes appear to be more than cosmetic. Earlier on Thursday, he moved to invest nearly 5 million US dollars (£3.8 million) in battleground state advertising to address daunting challenges in the states that will make or break his White House ambitions.

The New York businessman's campaign reserved television ad space over the coming 10 days in Florida, North Carolina, Ohio and Pennsylvania, according to Kantar Media's political ad tracker. While Mrs Clinton has spent more than 75 million US dollars (£57.2 million) on advertising in 10 states since locking up her party's nomination, Mr Trump's new investment marks his first of the general election season.

Mr Trump also made a last-minute change to his diary, scrapping a planned event in New York in order to travel with his running mate, Mike Pence, to tour the flood damage in Louisiana on Friday morning.

But the visit was met with harsh words from Governor John Bel Edwards, whose spokesman, Richard Carbo, said: "We welcome him to LA, but not for a photo-op."

In his remarks, Mr Trump struck a new, inclusive tone and tried to appeal directly to non-white voters, who have so far resisted his candidacy.

"I will not rest until children of every colour in this country are fully included in the American Dream," he said, urging African-American voters to give him a chance.

"What do you have to lose by trying something new?" he asked.

Mrs Clinton's campaign, meanwhile, brushed off the speech as just words that he read from a teleprompter.

"Donald Trump literally started his campaign by insulting people. He has continued to do so through each of the 428 days from then until now, without shame or regret," said spokeswoman Christina Reynolds in a statement.

"We learned tonight that his speechwriter and teleprompter knows he has much for which he should apologise. But that apology tonight is simply a well-written phrase until he tells us which of his many offensive, bullying and divisive comments he regrets and changes his tune altogether," she said.

It remains to be seen whether Mr Trump's revampt has come too late, and whether he has the discipline to maintain it.

But several Trump supporters at the rally applauded the move.

"It takes a lot of strength to say 'I'm sorry', to admit - not that he was wrong, but he wished he hadn't done it," said Cindy Ammons, 70, a Trump supporter from Spindale, North Carolina. "I think he's evolving," she said.

Nevertheless, some said it was unnecessary.

"I think the regime wanted him to say it. It was damage control," said Jeff Devers, 46, visiting from Arkansas. "But I personally don't regret anything that he's said. What he has said should have been said, politically correct or not."

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