Poll: Trump Tied With Clinton As He Regains Support From Women

Strengthened by burgeoning support from women, Donald Trump is tied with Hillary Clinton with less than a week before the election, according to the latest IBD/TIPP poll released Wednesday. Trump, despite his lewd comments about women that surfaced from 11 years ago and the double-digit accusations levied against him for sexual harassment, is powered by returning support from women.

Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump locked in dead heat with just six days to go

Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump now have 46 per cent of the vote each, a daily ABC News/Washington Post poll showed Wednesday Thirty-eight per cent of likely voters see Clinton as honest and trustworthy, against 46 per cent for Trump. The candidates were tied a month ago The survey was begun October 28, when the FBI told Congress it was investigating emails 'pertinent' to the Clinton email server probe A Bloomberg poll of independent voters showed Wednesday that the group backs Clinton by a margin of three points in a four-way split Clinton and Trump now have 46 per cent of the vote each, the ABC News/Washington Post poll showed Wednesday.

Clinton presses into Arizona, Trump focuses on Florida

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton speaks at a rally at Reverend Samuel Delevoe Memorial Park in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Tuesday, Nov. 1, 2016. Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton speaks at a rally at Reverend Samuel Delevoe Memorial Park in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Tuesday, Nov. 1, 2016.

The FBI keeps showing up in this election

File- FBI Director James Comey testified before Congress to answer "important questions" about the Hillary Clinton email investigation and his recommendation that the Justice Department not prosecute the former Secretary of State. File- FBI Director James Comey testified before Congress to answer "important questions" about the Hillary Clinton email investigation and his recommendation that the Justice Department not prosecute the former Secretary of State.

President Barack Obama gives a speech on the White House lawn Friday, June 13, 2014.

A boisterous President Barack Obama tied baseball, voting and Taco Bell together during an Ohio campaign appearance Tuesday, joking that if you have time to get a taco, you have time to vote, likening it to a "combo meal." "It's like you get something good for your soul and then you get something good for your appetite," he said, making reference to the World Series featuring the Cleveland Indians and the Chicago Cubs, who face off for Game 6 Tuesday night.

Asian markets rattled by Trump poll lead

Asian equities tumbled Wednesday, extending a global sell-off, and the Mexican peso fell after a poll showed Donald Trump overtaking market favorite Hillary Clinton in the race for the White House. With Clinton until last week comfortably ahead, traders were upbeat about her chances of winning on November 8 but news Friday that the FBI were again looking at her emails has raised the prospect of Trump becoming president.

Pro-Trump super PAC deploying $10 million in new TV ads

Donald Trump is getting a $10 million advertising boost from a super PAC attacking Hillary Clinton as too scandal-plagued for the White House. With this late ad buy, Future 45 and a companion nonprofit group are now the top big-money helper to the Republican presidential nominee.

Early voting update: Black vote declining with 24.4 million ballots cast

A dip in African-American turnout has knocked Democratic early voting numbers off their 2012 pace in key battleground states like North Carolina. The trend is also evident in early vote data from other swing states that could play key roles in deciding the election, including Florida and Georgia.

Democrats sue Trump, Republicans in four states and allege ‘campaign of vigilante voter intimidation’

Democratic Party officials filed lawsuits in four states this week against presidential candidate Donald Trump and the Republican Party, accusing campaign officials and supporters of seeking to threaten minorities to keep them from voting. With the bitter election just days away from a seeming conclusion, these lawsuits were part of a flurry of legal action that could alter what voters experience on Election Day and how party officials can approach voters going forward.

FBI plumbs email trove, shaking White House race

FBI agents are plumbing hundreds of thousands of emails in search of potentially incriminating evidence against Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton, in a high pressure probe seven days before the US presidential election. What will come out of it and when is not known, but the impact of the FBI's bombshell discovery of a new trove of Clinton emails is already reverberating in the neck-and-neck race for the White House.

a Texas Poll: Trump Lead Swells to 12 Points

A new poll in Texas shows that Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump's lead has swelled to 12 points over opponent Hillary Clinton. The KTVT-CBS 11/Dixie Strategies Poll reveals that if the election for president was held today, 52 percent of likely voters said they would vote for Trump, and 39 percent said they would vote for Clinton, reported CBSDFW.

FBI releases 17-year old archive from Clinton pardon case

Only days before the presidential election, the FBI released a 17-year-old archive of documents from a long-closed investigation into Bill Clinton's presidential pardon of a fugitive financier, prompting questions from Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign about its timing. The 129 pages of heavily censored material were published Monday on the FBI's Freedom of Information Act webpage and noted by one of the bureau's Twitter accounts Tuesday.

Jennifer Lopez accentuates her shapely legs in tight pants as she…

Blue jean babe! Jennifer Lopez accentuates her booty in VERY tight pants as she films Shades of Blue in New York After enjoying some Halloween fun with her two children, Jennifer Lopez was back on the set of her cop show on Tuesday. The 47-year-old star donned some oh-so-tight blue jeans as she filmed a scene in Queens, New York.

After Trump, an evangelical examination of conscience?

In this Sunday, Jan. 31, 2016 file photo, Jerry Falwell, Jr., left, president of Liberty University, guides Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump to his seat during a campaign event at the Orpheum Theatre in Sioux City, Iowa. Trump's candidacy has put a harsh spotlight on the fractures among Christian conservatives, most prominently the rift between old guard religious right leaders who backed the GOP nominee as an ally on abortion, and a comparatively younger generation who considered his personal conduct and rhetoric morally abhorrent.

Ex-GOP primary candidate, Ohio Gov. John Kasich snubs Donald Trump, writes in John McCain

Gov. John Kasich, who had vowed not to vote for Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump, voted Monday by absentee ballot. Chris Schrimpf, the governor's political spokesman, confirmed the write-in vote to cleveland.com and said Kasich voted straight-ticket Republican on the rest of his ballot.