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Americans will cast their verdicts on Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump Tuesday after an exhausting, acrimonious campaign that at times revolted the nation and tore at its fabric. History will be made no matter how the vote turns out.
Navarro: Trump is a shameless racist - CNN Video - CNN.com Ana Navarro: 'Trump has turned the Oval Office into a s---hole' | TheHill Ana Navarro: I'm voting for Hillary Clinton and against Donald Trump ... " Iraq snapshot " : There is a lot of energy vested in the US State Dept -- therefore also in the US press -- for this round of elections to be seen as a success and a confirmation of something. But the spin suffered a blow this week when Mohamed Haidar resigned as Vice Chair of the Elections Committee.
"Facebook along with other social media sites have taken aggressive actions to silence conservative voices such as ourselves," the pro-Trump social media stars charged. It's a claim Facebook denies, pointing out that the social media network has changed its settings so that users see more content from friends - and less from political groups of all stripes.
After a bitter, eighteen-month-long election that exposed some of the nation's most painful divisions and shook its democratic institutions, Americans prepared on Tuesday morning to cast their ballots for president. Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump will both wake up on Election Day, Nov. 8 after whirlwind tours of the nation's battleground states from Ohio to North Carolina and Nevada to await the results.
Voters throughout the country will hit the polls today to select the next president and elect members of the U.S. House of Representatives and local government. Five choices are at the top of the ticket today.
Democratic Gov. Steve Bullock and Republican challenger Greg Gianforte have spent more than a year trying to win over Montana voters, but there is one factor that will be out of their control and foremost in voters' minds on Tuesday: the race for president. Republican Donald Trump's run against Democrat Hillary Clinton has made for an unusual and uncertain election year.
An all-star roster came out for one of the last campaign rallies in support of Hillary Clinton on the eve of Election Day. "Let's all do our part so we can look back on 2016 and say we stood with Hillary Clinton on the right side of history," Springsteen said to raucous cheers from the crowd.
A record number of Americans have voted ahead of Election Day, driven by soaring turnout from Latino voters. That could be good news for Hillary Clinton.
Art Meadowcroft, 62, of Plymouth, Minn., poses for a photo after he went to the city hall to cast his vote early in Plymouth on Monday, Nov. 8, 2016. Meadocroft, who put a camouflage "Make America Great Again" baseball cap on as he left the polling place, said he voted for Donald Trump.
With hours left in the punishing 2016 presidential race, Democrat Hillary Clinton and Republican Donald Trump were in a flat-out sprint on Monday, powering through battleground states with rallies, retail stops and special guests along for the ride. 10:27 a.m. - Clinton's plane is wheels up from White Plains, New York, en route to Pittsburgh.
Madonna belted out some of her biggest hits on Monday night as she treated people in the city to a surprise outdoor concert in support of Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton. About 300 people jammed into Washington Square Park, in the heart of Manhattan, to watch the pop singer perform "Express Yourself," "Don't Tell Me," "Imagine," "Like a Prayer" and "If I Had a Hammer" while they sang along.
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton arrives at a campaign rally at Grand Valley State University in Allendale, Mich., Monday, Nov. 7, 2016. ORG XMIT: MIPS103 Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton arrives at a campaign rally at Grand Valley State University in Allendale, Mich., Monday, Nov. 7, 2016.
No racial group has suffered more from illegal immigration than Black America. Yet the question remains: Will large numbers of African-Americans finally vote Republican and help Donald Trump build his wall and rebuild America? In our opinion, the answer is a resounding yes.
The political consensus is virtually unanimous: If Hillary Clinton wins North Carolina, Donald Trump has to win every other competitive state to take the White House. Clinton has other paths to victory without North Carolina, but the state has been a focus for Democrats this cycle.
HILLARY Clinton has been received enthusiastically by audiences across America during her long Presidential campaign, but for sheer adulation her reception in Cleveland, Ohio, last Friday takes some beating. The sustained applause and screaming that greeted her appearance at her Get-Out-the-Vote rally probably owed at least something to the fact that she just had been introduced - "the next President of the United States!" by none other than rap star Jay Z. Mr Z, who seconds earlier had described Donald Trump's conversation as "divisive", performed at the rally, as did his wife, Beyonce.
The Herald/Sunday Herald Budget business briefing at the Skypark, Glasgow. Pictured is host Iain Macwhirter Photograph by Colin Mearns 20 March 2014 THERE is an air of cautious optimism among Democrats and their liberal supporters in the dying days of the most bitter presidential election America has experienced.
"Immigration is very important and the Republicans have to get involved," Trump said on Fox & Friends in Dec. 2012 in footage uncovered by CNN's Andrew Kaczynski . "Look, they're never going to win another election unless they do something."
THE long race to the White House is finally coming to a close with acrimonious exchanges between the candidates to the end as Donald Trump branded his rival a stupid "phoney" and Hillary Clinton denounced her Republican challenger as a "loose cannon". In a contest that has been mired by personal attacks and overshadowed for several days by an FBI investigation into the former First Lady's emails, whatever the result in the early hours of Wednesday morning UK time, one thing is certain: America is a deeply divided country.
The local party faithful wrapped up their get-out-and-vote efforts Monday ahead of a nail-biter of a presidential election on Tuesday. Local Republicans tried to smooth over the intraparty turmoil over their candidate, Donald Trump, and show a unified front against Hillary Clinton.