Trump indicates u-turn on poll promises including climate change, jailing Clinton

Trump indicates u-turn on poll promises including climate change, jailing Clinton
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Highlights

Two weeks after his shocking election victory, US President-elect Donald Trump has indicated a u-turn on several of his key poll promises and rhetoric, including his hardline on climate change, torture of detainees and his vow to jail Hillary Clinton.

Washington: Two weeks after his shocking election victory, US President-elect Donald Trump has indicated a u-turn on several of his key poll promises and rhetoric, including his hardline on climate change, torture of detainees and his vow to jail Hillary Clinton.

During an interview with reporters and editors of The New York Times, Trump threw enough hints that he would be an unconventional president in terms of distancing himself from his business, receiving inputs from family members in his governance and relationship with the press.

He held out assurances that he did not intend to embrace extremist positions in some areas, the daily said after the interview with Trump, who "vigorously denounced" a white nationalist conference last weekend in Washington.

Trump made a u-turn from his campaign promise on appointing a special prosecutor to investigate into the alleged email scandal of his presidential rival Hillary Clinton.

"I don't want to hurt the Clintons, I really don't," he said, adding "she went through a lot and suffered greatly in many different ways."

During the election campaign Trump had said Clinton would be in jail if he won the elections. He now faces the consternation of supporters who took that pledge literally.

On climate change, he said "I'm looking at it very closely" as he refused to repeat his promise to abandon the international climate accord.

"I have an open mind to it" and that clean air and "crystal clear water" were vitally important, Trump said.

Earlier, Trump had called climate change a "hoax" perpetrated by China and vowed to "cancel" the hard-fought Paris Agreement concluded last year to limit dangerous global warming.

Similarly, on the issue of torture, the president-elect said that he has changed his mind after his meeting with Gen (rtd) James Mattis, whom he is considering to appoint as the Defence Secretary.

"He (Mattis) said, 'I've never found it to be useful,'" Trump said, adding that Mattis found more value in building trust and rewarding cooperation with terrorism suspects: "'Give me a pack of cigarettes and a couple of beers, and I'll do better.'"

"I was very impressed by that answer," Trump said, adding that torture is "not going to make the kind of a difference that a lot of people are thinking." During the election campaign, he had advocated for restoring water boarding and other sever torture methods.

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