Former US
presidents George H W Bush and George W Bush will not endorse Donald Trump's
candidacy for president, aides have told local media.
This marks a first for the 91-year-old
former president Bush, who had endorsed Republicans in the past five elections.
Republican
politicians are struggling to define their support, or lack thereof, for Donald
Trump.
Mr Trump's
remaining opponents dropped out earlier this week leaving him as the
presumptive Republican nominee.
Both Bush men
had previously campaigned this year for former Florida Governor Jeb Bush, who
exited the race in February.
They had each
supported past Republican presidential nominees John McCain in 2008 and Mitt
Romney in 2012.
Although neither
former president has openly attacked Mr Trump or his policy proposals, George W
Bush made a veiled criticism at a campaign event for his younger brother
saying, "The strongest person usually isn't the loudest one in the
room".
"I understand that Americans are
angry and frustrated. But we do not need someone in the Oval Office who mirrors
and inflames our anger and frustration,"George W Bush told the South
Carolina audience.
Many Republican candidates for lower
offices are concerned about running on the same ballot as Donald Trump, who has
alienated minority voters through his rhetoric about building a wall with
Mexico and banning US entry to Muslim travellers.
Many American choose
to vote for either the Democrat or Republican Party, rather than weighing the
individual candidates.
Republican
representatives fear that voters who oppose Trump may eschew the Republican
Party all together.
John McCain, who
is running for his sixth term as senator for the state of Arizona, privately
told donors that he will face a tough re-election campaign sharing a ballot
with Trump.
"If Donald Trump is at the top of
the ticket, here in Arizona, with over 30 percent of the vote being the
Hispanic vote, no doubt that this may be the race of my life," the former
candidate said according to audio obtained by Politico on Thursday.
Hours after Mr
Trump's remaining rivals dropped out, the Democrat frontrunner Hillary Clinton
released a campaign ad seeking to take advantage of the vitriolic language and
insults that other Republicans have used to refer to Mr Trump.
In her tweet to
share the video, Mrs Clinton wrote "Republicans agree: Donald Trump is
reckless, dangerous, and divisive."
Some Republicans, including a former top
adviser and speechwriter to Senator McCain, have begun to openly call for the
party to oppose the presumptive nominee and to work to independently elect a
conservative candidate, such as Nebraska Senator Ben Sasse, who has indicated
that he will not be supporting Mr Trump.
In a series of
media interviews following Mr Trump's emergence as the sole remaining
Republican candidate, he has described his vision for the first 100 days of his
administration.
After 100 days
the wall on the US-Mexico border will be designed, the ban on Muslims will be
in place, and plans to revoke President Obama's executive orders will be under
way,

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