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Supporters of Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump cheer during a rally at the Travis County Exposition Centre in Austin, Texas. Image Credit: AFP

Austin, Texas: Donald Trump suggested on Tuesday that he is open to “softening” laws dealing with immigrants in the country illegally, the latest sign that the Republican presidential nominee is considering easing the hardline stance he has taken since the beginning of his campaign.

Trump, taping a town hall in Austin, Texas, for Fox News, was asked by moderator Sean Hannity if he would change current statutes to accommodate law-abiding citizens or long-time residents who have raised children in the US.

“There certainly can be a softening because we’re not looking to hurt people,” Trump answered. “We want people — we have some great people in this country.”

“We are going to follow the laws of this country,” he added.

Trump has repeatedly declared that if elected, he would deport the 11 million people living in the US illegally. But he has hedged his stance in recent days, and during the taping he ruminated aloud about the fairness of breaking up families. He even polled the audience about what they would do about the crucial policy.

“So you have somebody who’s been in the country for 20 years, has done a great job, and everything else,” Trump said. “Do we take him and the family and her and him or whatever and send him out?”

The crowd’s reaction was split: Some cheered when Trump suggested that the immigrants be allowed to stay, others roared when he suggested deporting them.

The Republican nominee said he “would come out with a decision very soon” about deportations.

But his new campaign manager, Kellyanne Conway, may have offered a hint about his position. When she was asked about deportations on CNN on Tuesday, she claimed that Trump “had not said that for a while.”

“There could be a way to figure out how to do it so we’re not here to harm people,” she said.

Trump had been scheduled to outline his immigration policies on Thursday in Colorado. But that speech has been postponed, likely until next week.

At a rally in Austin later on Tuesday, Trump made no mention of his possible shift on deportations, instead repeating his vow to build a wall to fortify the nation’s southern border with Mexico and to eject immigrants there illegally who have committed criminal and violent acts.

But Trump’s public deliberation about deportations could be the latest signal that as the general campaign heats up, he is moving away from one of his divisive, signature proposals from the Republican primary in order to broaden his base of support. He first suggested on Monday that he was open to allowing some immigrants to stay, suggesting that he wanted a “fair, but firm” policy.

That is a far cry from the early days of the primaries, when Trump vowed to use a “deportation force” to round up and deport the millions of people living in the country illegally. That proposal excited many of his core supporters, but alienated Hispanic voters who could be pivotal in key states.

But his new rhetoric on immigration is part of a full-court press by Trump in recent days to improve his standing among minorities, who polls show overwhelmingly favour his Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton.

Trump at several recent rallies has urged African-American voters to support him, pledging that his public safety and economic policies will improve their quality of life while suggesting that Democrats had taken them for granted.

And aides said on Tuesday that in the coming weeks Trump was planning trips to urban areas to conduct campaign stops he has largely avoided to this point, including stops at charter schools, small businesses and churches in black and Latino communities.

The Trump campaign’s potential plans to visit inner cities were first reported on Tuesday by The Washington Post.