Editor Brian Harrod Provides Comprehensive up-to-date news coverage, with aggregated news from sources all over the world from the Roundup Newswires Network
A chip off the old block: Did Malia Obama smoke MARIJUANA at Lollapalooza? Video shows the president's eldest daughter puffing on a suspicious cigarette Now the Secret Service steps into Trump 'incitement to violence' row: Agents have spoken to campaign 'more than once' about his call for 'Second Amendment' action against Clinton 'He founded ISIS!': Now Trump claims Obama deserves credit for creating the Middle Eastern terror army - and names 'crooked Hillary' as its 'co-founder' Trump faces demands from his own party to take back Second Amendment 'threat' to Clinton - as ex-senator writes to demand his removal as candidate Is this the most epic engagement EVER? Canadian 'power couple' travel to Iceland with a full crew for pre-wedding shoot atop volcanic rocks and icy glaciers Fertility rates drop to lowest level EVER in America: Fewer than 6 babies per 100 women being born each year ... (more)
Donald Trump accused President Barack Obama on Wednesday of establishing the Islamic State group that is wreaking havoc from the Middle East to European cities. A moment later on another topic, he referred to the president by his full legal name: Barack Hussein Obama .
Mounting a successful campaign to get the OK would be difficult, according to officials from the Geneva Chamber of Commerce. The chamber supports the tax increase.
Hillary Clinton says there could be ''tremendous consequences'' from Donald Trump's comments that there may be something Second Amendment supporters ''can do'' to stop her. Clinton says the remark was a ''casual inciting of violence'' that shows he lacks the temperament to be commander-in-chief.
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton arrives at Des Moines International Airport in Des Moines, Wednesday, Aug. 10, 2016. Clinton is in town to tour Raygun, a printing, design and clothing company and attend a campaign rally.
"Words can have tremendous consequences," the Democratic nominee said of Trump's Tuesday comments regarding the Second Amendment . "Yesterday we witnessed the latest in a long line of casual comments from Donald Trump that cross the line."
Donald Trump stood in front of a bunch of men in hard hats on Wednesday during a campaign stop in Virginia to make a simple pitch. It was he, not Hillary Clinton, who would protect their jobs in the coal industry.
Seddique Mateen, the father of the suspect in the June mass shooting at an Orlando nightclub, secured a prime seat at a rally for Hillary Clinton on Monday outside the city. For 25 minutes, Mateen sat right behind the Democratic nominee for president as she remembered the victims of the Pulse nightclub shooting and laid out her policies.
Democratic senatorial candidate Conner Eldridge has issued a statement blasting Donald Trump' s comment yesterday suggesting a "Second Amendment " solution to avoiding Hillary Clinton appointees to the U.S. Supreme Court. "Donald Trump's reference yesterday to individuals taking violent action against Hillary Clinton is astounding.
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.
Pressure from high-profile Republicans and rank-and-file voters is mounting to reject Donald Trump's candidacy amid fallout from him saying gun rights activists could stop Hillary Clinton nominating liberal US Supreme Court justices. Nearly one-fifth of 396 registered Republicans in a Reuters/Ipsos August 5-8 poll released on Wednesday want Trump to drop out of the race for the White House and another 10 per cent "don't know" whether the Republican nominee should or not.
Nearly one-fifth of registered Republicans want Donald Trump to drop out of the race for the White House, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll released Wednesday, reflecting the turmoil his candidacy has sown within his party. The "drop out" response more than doubles to 44 percent when voters of all parties are included.
Hillary Clinton has retained most of the bounce she received after the Democratic National Convention and now enjoys a 6-point lead over Donald Trump in a two-way contest among likely voters. The Democratic presidential nominee's advantage in a new Bloomberg Politics national poll is smaller than in some surveys conducted the week after her convention, including some that sampled registered voters, a broader group.
TRENTON - Donald Trump insisted Tuesday night he didn't suggest Second Amendment advocates could use violence against Hillary Clinton to stop her from nominating justices to the U.S. Supreme Court as president. Instead, the Republican presidential nominee stressed what he meant was that pro-gun supporters could use their "political power" to try and derail Clinton, his Democratic opponent.
Actor Martin Sheen called Donald Trump an "empty-headed moron" during an interview with The Hollywood Reporter that was posted online Tuesday. Sheen, who for seven years played President Jed Bartlet in the television series "The West Wing," was discussing his upcoming movie "The Vessel" when the question-and-answer interview turned to politics.
Nearly four years ago, when Barbra Streisand last played Chicago's United Center, she duetted with three teenage tenors, a saxophonist and her son, Jason Gould. Turns out, Streisand doesn't need any help to captivate a crowd, which she did Tuesday as part of "Barbra: The Music ... The Mem'ries ... The Magic," her nine-city tour that launched earlier this month in Los Angeles.
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has said he wants to "debate very badly" with his Democratic rival Hillary Clinton but will first see terms and conditions of the three presidential debates scheduled for September and October. "I will absolutely do three debates.
Democrats have attacked US presidential nominee Donald Trump after he ignited a fresh political firestorm by declaring gun rights supporters might still find a way to stop Hillary Clinton, even if she should defeat him and then name anti-gun Supreme Court justices. Democrats have attacked US presidential nominee Donald Trump after he ignited a fresh political firestorm by declaring gun rights supporters might still find a way to stop Hillary Clinton, even if she should defeat him and then name anti-gun Supreme Court justices.
Brian Stelter, a CNN critic, took Fox News' Sean Hannity to task on Sunday, suggesting that the latter had committed journalistic malpractice by not pushing back against Donald Trump's theory that the 2016 election will be rigged against him. Hannity had asked Trump to explain his statement earlier in the day that the election is going to be rigged.
Donald Trump's campaign is saying the Republican nominee was touting the "amazing spirit" of Second Amendment supporters when he suggested they "could do" something to prevent Hillary Clinton as president from overturning the right to bear arms. "By the way, if she gets to pick her judges, nothing you can do, folks.