Editor Brian Harrod Provides Comprehensive up-to-date news coverage, with aggregated news from sources all over the world from the Roundup Newswires Network
Hacked emails show Hillary Clinton's campaign wrestled with how to announce her opposition to construction of the controversial Keystone XL pipeline without losing the support of labor unions that supported to project. Emails published this week by WikiLeaks show debate and confusion within the Clinton camp as it faced down the unexpectedly strong primary challenge by liberal Sen. Bernie Sanders, who opposed the pipeline.
Republican U.S. presidential nominee Donald Trump speaks as Democratic U.S. presidential nominee Hillary Clinton listens during their third and final 2016 presidential campaign debate at UNLV in Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S., October 19, 2016. No matter which presidential candidate comes out ahead on Election Day, many Americans won't be ready to accept the results.
Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton touted early voting numbers in Ohio during a visit to Cleveland on Friday. She attacked her Republican rival Donald Trump for his failure to accept the results of the presidential election.
September's fundraising and spending by Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump outpaced the numbers the candidates posted in any month so far. No surprise there.
Sticking to his claims that newly revealed video shows Democratic operatives discussing paying of protesters to infiltrate and incite violence at his rallies, Donald Trump told a crowd in Johnstown on Friday that the clips prove what he's been saying all along: "It's a rigged system, folks." "We had protesters coming in and they were pretty violent guys, and our people, they're pretty tough cookies, and it came out that they [the protesters] were paid by the DNC," he said to a large crowd inside the Cambria County War Memorial Arena here.
Former NYC Mayor Rudy Giuliani Rudy Giuliani speaks at Boy Scouts of America's Distinguished Citizen Award Dinner Thursday evening at the Lancaster Marriott, Sept. 29, 2016.
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, second from left, and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, right, greet guests at the end of the 71st annual Alfred E. Smith Memorial Foundation Dinner, a charity gala organized by the Archdiocese of New York, Thursday. Both candidates tweeted that they won Wednesday's final presidential debate.
Donald Trump is the Republican nominee, which is frightening.We must make sure his hateful rhetoric does not even come close... Donald Trump has gone too far with his attacks on Gold Star parents Khizr and Ghazala Khan, whose son Army Capt. Humayun Khan... A Donald Trump White House would be a disaster, and this goes way beyond any ideological difference.
Crew members aboard the Danish merchant marine training ship, the Danmark, stand high above the deck on the rigging to unfurl the sails as the ship prepares to sail up the Chesapeake Bay. Donald Trump has leaned on the word "rigged" to describe the media, the debate schedule, and most of the rest of this election season.
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, second from right, and his wife Melania Trump, right, watch as Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, second from left, is helped into her chair by Cardinal Timothy Dolan, Archbishop of New York, left, after speaking at the 71st annual Alfred E. Smith Memorial Foundation Dinner, a charity gala organized by the Archdiocese of New York, Thursday at the Waldorf Astoria hotel in New York. Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, right, reacts as Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during the Alfred E. Smith Memorial Foundation dinner, Thursday in New York.
At Wednesday's debate, Donald Trump said Hillary Clinton "has no idea whether it's Russia" who hacked into the private networks of her campaign's allies, then released the information to WikiLeaks and the world. "Our country has no idea."
Donald Trump speaking at the Iowa Republican Party's 2015 Lincoln Dinner at the Iowa Events Center in Des Moines, Iowa. If Donald Trump were to challenge the outcome of next month's presidential election, as he has hinted he might, he would face a difficult and expensive fight, according to election attorneys and a review of voting laws in key battleground states.
Even Hillary can't fake a smile! Trump is repeatedly BOOED as series of mean-spirited Clinton 'jokes' fall flat at traditionally light-hearted New York charity dinner New York's great and good have a night to forget: Giuliani is roasted by Clinton at dinner, while she ribs Cuomo and DeBlasio for their frosty relationship - but Michael Bloomberg gets a big cheer Trump's send up of Melania, Hillary's Statue of Liberty zinger and a risky sex joke from the host: The best punchlines from the Al Smith dinner Former Fox and CBS anchor has a new job as a gay porn star and says there's much less pressure in his current line of work The world's richest man doesn't have expensive tastes: Bill Gates eats Big Macs for lunch and demands a fridge full of Diet Coke when he stays in hotels 'I love you mate': Harrowing video shows the moment a man suffering terminal cancer DIES - after taking a deadly ... (more)
Maine Gov. Paul LePage, who has often found himself under fire for his own controversial statements, Thursday had some advice for outspoken GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump's refusal to answer if he'd accept the election results if he loses: "Get over yourself." "That's an absolute stupid move, period," LePage told WGAN-AM in an interview on Thursday.
Two months after he jumped into the presidential race as a political unknown on the fringe, independent candidate Evan McMullin is surging in the polls in Utah and drawing large crowds at rallies as he becomes the conduit for conservative voters fed up with Republican Donald Trump's crudeness and antics. The Republican stronghold of Utah is suddenly a toss-up state amid widespread rejection of Trump, with polls showing McMullin closing in on the Republican nominee and Democrat Hillary Clinton.
It was an exercise in mudslinging. At the final presidential debate Wednesday, Donald Trump doubled down on denying he ever sexually assaulted women, and on claims - refuted by - that the election is "rigged."
Donald Trump has stepped back only slightly from his refusal to say during his debate with Hillary Clinton whether he would concede if he loses on Election Day, failing to stem the criticism that flowed from Republicans and Democrats over an attitude some contended struck at the heart of American democracy. "I would like to promise and pledge to all of my voters and supporters and to all of the people of the United States that I will totally accept the results of this great and historic presidential election," Trump said Thursday while campaigning in Ohio.
With just 16 days left until the election, and with Donald Trump reaching new lows in the polls, the beleaguered presidential hopeful received a morale boost on Sunday in the form of his very first major newspaper endorsement. As endorsements go, it was hardly glowing .