AP FACT CHECK: Trump objects to cursing
The notably potty-mouthed New York billionaire objected to an expletive uttered by former Mexican President Vicente Fox over Trump's proposal to build a fortress-like wall along the Mexican border and make Mexico pay for it.
Trump, meantime, has run a profanity-laced campaign, blurted out the S-word on multiple occasions and used an offensive term for coward against rival Ted Cruz.
The bursting of the housing bubble in late 2007 is what really damaged the Hispanic community, before Barack Obama took office.
MARCO RUBIO: It is a health care law that is basically forcing companies to lay people off, cut people's hours, move people to part-time.
The claim that Obama's health care law is a job killer is hard to square with the fact that the economy has added more than 13.4 million jobs since the law took effect.
The unemployment rate has fallen to 4.9 percent from 9.9. percent since Obama signed the act.
The persistence of "involuntary" part-time employment has led many economists to worry that it could be a long-term problem, but they disagree on whether the health care overhaul is the root cause of that.
Says allowing health insurers to sell polices across state lines would spark competition, and "that's going to solve the problem."
Allowing the interstate sale of health insurance policies could result in a proliferation of lower-premium plans.
State insurance and consumer-protection regulators say such an approach would allow skimpy out-of-state policies to undercut benefits that individual states require, triggering a race to the bottom.
Repeats a flawed claim to have wiped out an insurance "bailout" in President Barack Obama's health care law.
At issue is a part of the health care law called "risk corridors," intended to compensate insurers that signed up sicker-than-expected patients under the health care law, incurring high costs.
Challenged by former GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney to release his tax returns, he said "I will absolutely give my return, but I'm being audited now for two or three years, so I can't do it until the audit is finished, obviously."
[...] in any event, no level of scrutiny prevents him from making his returns public, said Joseph Thorndike, a tax law professor and contributing editor to Tax Analysts, an industry publication.