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Donald Trump supporters have been sharing fake photos of huge crowds at the US President's Phoenix rally on social media, following claims the event failed to draw big numbers.
Images showing thousands of people lining the streets in Arizona were widely shared by Republicans and the leader's core base.
But the photos were quickly debunked as fake. They actually showed an aerial view of crowds that had turned out for a championship parade for the Cleveland Cavaliers basketball team.
Mr Trump had been discouraged from speaking in Arizona by local officials, with mayor Greg Stanton urging him to delay the visit in the wake of the Charlottesville violence. He claimed his president had "doused racial tensions with gasoline".
"With his planned visit to Phoenix, I fear the President may be looking to light a match," Mayor Stanton wrote. "That’s why I asked the President to delay his visit. It’s time to let cooler heads prevail and begin the healing process."
Donald Trump's international Presidential trips
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The former real estate mogul provoked a national furore in the wake of the Virginia protest organised by white supremacists - that led to the killing of a counter-protester - after he blamed the violence on "both sides".
The Phoenix rally saw Mr Trump blast the "dishonest media" for misrepresenting his remarks in a rambling speech designed to recapture the fervour that sent him to the White House.
Mr Trump's job approval rating dropped to 34 per cent in the wake of the violence, and is now at 35 per cent, according to the latest Gallup poll.
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