Bill Clinton: State ‘wouldn’t do anything they shouldn’t do’

Bill Clinton Bill Clinton: State 'wouldn't do anything they shouldn't do' Candidates can't campaign as dividers and govern as unifiers Two parties use legitimate means to mask rigged debates MORE in an interview said some donors may have given to the Clinton Foundation to gain influence with the Clintons, but that he trusted the State Department to handle possible conflicts of interest when his wife was secretary of State. "It was natural for people who've been our political allies and personal friends to call and ask for things," Bill Clinton told Steve Inskeep in an interview broadcast Monday on NPR's "Morning Edition."

Gary Johnson: ‘No chance’ Weld drops off ticket

Gary Johnson says his running mate is not dropping out of the race: Bill Weld is in this "for the long-haul" https://t.co/xZIyosVupP Gary Johnson Gary Johnson: 'No chance' Weld drops off ticket Poll: Trump, Clinton in tight race in Florida Libertarian VP candidate: Talk of defecting for Clinton 'wishful thinking' MORE insisted Monday there's "no chance" his running mate Bill Weld will leave the ticket for fear the two are taking votes from Hillary Rodham Clinton Gary Johnson: 'No chance' Weld drops off ticket Bill Clinton: State 'wouldn't do anything they shouldn't do' Clinton ad knocks Trump over immigration MORE Donald Trump Gary Johnson: 'No chance' Weld drops off ticket Clinton ad knocks Trump over immigration Clinton to make case to millennials during Philadelphia speech MORE "No, Bill Weld is in this for the long haul and beyond my wildest dreams Bill Weld is my running mate," ... (more)

Dole, Kassebaum regret erosion of bipartisanship

Seated between U.S. Rep. Lynn Jenkins and Gov. Sam Brownback, former Senate Majority Leader and presidential candidate Bob Dole was honored at the Combat Air Museum at Forbes Field on Thursday where a conference room used for the museum's youth education programs was renamed the Bob Dole Education Center.

Donald Trump: John Kasich is not on board because ‘he got beaten so badly’

Donald Trump said Monday he doesn't really care if people like Ohio Gov. John Kasich endorse him - but he also didn't contradict Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus, who on Sunday hinted at possible retribution for such holdout Republicans. "I really don't care.

Pump problem? Gov. Nathan Deal says he’s received no complaints

The governor of Georgia said Sunday his office hasn't received any complaints of gas shortages within the state after a pipeline spill in central Alabama, but some gas station employees have said they've had to close because they're out.

Shifting Cuban voters could be the difference in Florida

Francis Suarez comes from a long line of civic and political leaders who have formed the Republican bedrock in south Florida's Cuban community for a half-century. Yet the 38-year-old Miami city commissioner hasn't decided whether he will vote for his party's presidential nominee.

Pump problem? Gov’s office says they’ve gotten no complaints

Despite some gas station employees saying they've run out, the Georgia governor's office has said they haven't received any complaints of gas shortages within the state after a pipeline spill in central Alabama. Gov. Nathan Deal's spokeswoman Jen Ryan said in a statement Sunday that they haven't received any complaints but will act accordingly if that changes.

Trump position on coal more nostalgia than policy

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Pump problem? Gova s office says theya ve gotten no complaints

Despite some gas station employees saying they've run out, the Georgia governor's office has said they have not received any complaints of gas shortages within the state after a pipeline spill in central Alabama. "As of now we've not received any complaints," Gov. Nathan Deal's spokeswoman Jen Ryan said in a statement Sunday.

Congress works to finish Zika aid, prevent shutdown

Driven by a desire to free up endangered lawmakers to campaign, congressional negotiators are working to quickly complete a spending bill to prevent an election-season government shutdown and finally provide money to battle the threat of the Zika virus. The stopgap measure would keep the government running past the end of the budget year this month.

Senate’s odd couple forge unlikely alliance on environment

In this May 19, 2016, file photo, Senate Environment and Public Works Committee Chairman Sen. James Inhofe, R-Okla., embraces the committee's ranking member Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., at a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington. One is a Brooklyn-born, northern California liberal who carved out time in a two-decade Senate career to write a politics-sex-and-power thriller or two.

N.Y.-area bombings raise immigrant screening concerns

Check out this story on USATODAY.com: http://usat.ly/2df0S2R Suspected bomber Ahmad Khan Rahami is taken into custody after a shootout with police on Sept. 19, 2016, in Linden, N.J. The revelation that the suspected New York City bomber was born in Afghanistan before becoming a U.S. citizen prompted Republicans to attack the U.S. government's immigrant screening process.

Pollster Zogby Dismisses Talk of Surges and Free Falls

The public might not realize it, but the presidential race is neither a Donald Trump surge nor a Hillary Clinton free fall, veteran pollster John Zogby contends . Despite the oversaturated and distorted media coverage of the campaign, which gives an inaccurate impression of wild swings for one candidate or the other, Zogby said this race has actually been run within a relatively narrow band, especially when considering the third-party candidates.

a Un and tribal takeover?

A massive 792-page Senate Energy Committee bill threatens to authorize federal bureaucrats to cede extensive control over western state water and property rights, energy development and forest management to Native American tribes, local UN sustainability councils and radical environmentalist groups. Certain provisions could undermine the foundations of our nation from within our nation.

In Florida, a shifting Cuban vote could be the difference

Francis Suarez comes from a long line of civic and political leaders who have formed the Republican bedrock in south Florida's Cuban community for a half-century. Yet the 38-year-old Miami city commissioner hasn't decided whether he will vote for his party's presidential nominee.

South Carolina party chairs beat vitriol with friendship

In this Sept. 8, 2016 photo, South Carolina Democratic Party Chairman Jaime Harrison and his GOP counterpart, Chairman Matt Moore, laugh after a recent voter education forum in Florence, S.C. In a year of intense polarization and partisanship and in a state known for its rough-and-tumble politics, Harrison and Moore actively work to cut through the partisan bull, while still supporting their parties' candidates.