Real estate magnate Donald Trump moved to the top of the 2016 Republican presidential field in a CNN poll released yesterday, edging rival Jeb Bush and gaining support from Republicans in the last month despite a series of controversial statements.

Trump was backed by 18 per cent of Republicans in the CNN poll, which was conducted entirely after his July 18 criticism of Republican Senator John McCain’s war record. His lead over Bush, a former Florida governor who was at 15 per cent, was within the poll’s margin of error.

“There is a movement going on. This is more than me,” Trump said yesterday on CNN’s State of the Union, saying the poll results were not surprising. “People are tired of these incompetent politicians in Washington that can’t get anything done.”

Trump’s support among Republicans increased six percentage points since late June despite a flood of rebukes of Trump after he said McCain, a former Navy pilot who was tortured during more than five years in captivity during the Vietnam War, was not a war hero because he was captured.

Trump and Bush were joined near the top of the pack by Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker, who had 10 percent support among the Republican and Republican-leaning independent registered voters who were surveyed in the CNN poll. None of the other Republican candidates gained double-digit support.

People are tired of these incompetent politicians in Washington that can’t get anything done

Sixteen Republicans are running for the party’s presidential nomination in the November 2016 election.

Trump has been criticised by fellow Republican candidates and party leaders for making incendiary comments about Mexican immigrants, belittling McCain’s war record and for his personal attacks against rival Republican White House contenders such as Senator Lindsey Graham and former Texas Governor Rick Perry. Trump gave out Graham’s private cell phone number at a rally last week.

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump gestures during a news conference near the US-Mexico border outside Laredo, Texas.Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump gestures during a news conference near the US-Mexico border outside Laredo, Texas.

“I don’t think Mr Trump is qualified to be commander-in-chief, I think he is bankrupt when it comes to all the qualities you need to lead the men and women in uniform and to lead a great nation,” Graham said on ABC’s This Week.”

Perry, appearing on CNN, said Trump’s candidacy “is not necessarily moving the cause of conservatism forward.” The CNN poll was conducted July 22-25 among 1,017 adults.

The margin of error was 3.5 percentage points among the registered voting sample of 419 Republicans and Republican-leaning independents. Meanwhile, Trump threatened in an interview published on Thursday to run as a political independent if he does not get 'fair' treatment from the Republican Party.

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