"We can't let people in. ... We have to be very, very strong," the presumptive Republican presidential nominee said in one of a host of broadcast interviews he undertook in advance of a speech he planned later today in New Hampshire.
"The problem is we have thousands of people right now in our country. You have people that were born in this country" who are susceptible to becoming "radicalised," the billionaire real estate mogul told Fox News Channel's "Fox & Friends.
Trump, who got embroiled in controversy early in the presidential sweepstakes when he advocated a ban on Muslims being admitted to the United States, said "there are people out there with worse intentions" than the perpetrator of the shootings in Orlando yesterday. "They have to report these people," he said.
Trump planned later today to further address the deadliest shooting in modern US history in a campaign speech originally intended to attack Hillary Clinton, the presumptive Democratic nominee.
Trump will retool his talk in New Hampshire to "further address this terrorist attack, immigration and national security," his campaign said today.
A gunman wielding an assault-style rifle and handgun opened fire inside a crowded gay nightclub in Orlando early Sunday, killing at least 50 people before dying in a gunfight with police.
Another 53 people were hospitalised, most in critical condition. Authorities identified the shooter as Omar Mateen, a 29-year-old US citizen from Fort Pierce, Florida.
In the hours after the Orlando shooting, Trump issued a statement calling on President Barack Obama to resign for refusing "to even say the words 'radical Islam'" in his response to the attack. He said Clinton should exit the presidential race if she does the same.
In an address from the White House, Obama called the tragedy an act of terror and hate. He did not talk about religious extremists. He said the FBI would investigate the shootings in the gay nightclub as terrorism, but added the gunman's motivations were unclear.
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