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In this June 10, 2016 file photo, Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump gives a thumbs-up while addressing the Faith and Freedom Coalition's Road to Majority Conference in Washington. Trump will deliver a speech outlining his trade policies on June 28, a speech that is sure to underscore the stark differences between his approach and that of Democratic rival Hillary Clinton when it comes to handling the economy.
French Prime Minister Manuel Valls says in an impassioned plea for Europe that there is no quick fix for fractures exposed by the British referendum because the reasons that nations adhere to the European Union must be reinvented. He says some aspects of Britain's EU exit must be dealt with urgently but "the process of re-founding Europe will take time."
President Barack Obama isn't expecting "major, cataclysmic changes" as a result of Britain's pending exit from the European Union. Speaking to NPR, Obama also said there are more differences than similarities when it comes to Britain's election compared with the current presidential election in the United States where discontent has fueled Republican Donald Trump's rise.
Hillary Clinton pledged she will not repeat the failed strategy of Britain's "remain" campaign in the wake of the country's stunning vote to leave the European Union in her own campaign against Donald Trump. Clinton said in an interview with the social medium LinkedIn on Monday there are parallels between the "leave" campaign that prevailed in the country's EU referendum and the Trump campaign's focus on skepticism of political institutions and the effects of immigration.
When FBI Director James Comey discussed on national television the massacre at an Orlando nightclub, he made an off-the-cuff policy decision not to speak the gunman's name. "You will notice that I am not using the killer's name, and I will try not to do that," Comey said during the live news conference.
What happens when the veteran pollster Peter D. Hart invites 11 blue-collar and service-industry voters into a downtown office suite here and bids them to talk politics? You are reminded that the despair among those in families with incomes below $50,000 is as deep as the anger they have expressed at the polls all year. You learn that the shortcomings rivals identify in presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump are seen as strengths among his backers.
With each party's presidential candidate virtually chosen, with only the formal procedure of the conventions yet to occur, three critical groups of voters remain in the likely, but still uncertain, category. The questions surrounding each group are whether their expressed opinions will actually translate into votes in November, and whether they will change their choice between now and Election Day.
In this June 22, 2016, file photo, Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton gestures as she speaks during a rally in Raleigh, N.C. Republican Donald Trump will deliver a speech outlining his trade policies on June 28, a speech that is sure to underscore the stark differences between his approach and that of Clinton when it comes to handling the economy. Trump favors big tax cuts that mainly would help the rich.
This may come as some surprise, but not everything that happens in the world is about Donald Trump. Not everything is even about America.Sure, the hot takes are easy to write: Trump wants to limit immigration; Brexit supporters were concerned about immigration.
Titled "Tested," the 30-second spot focuses on the presumptive GOP presidential nominee's response to Britons voting last week in favor of leaving the European Union. "Every president is tested by world events, but Donald Trump thinks about how his golf resort can profit from them," says a monotone voiceover, referring to Trump visiting Trump Turnberry in Scotland a day after the Brexit vote, and expressing how an EU-free United Kingdom may benefit his businesses.
Polls used to tell Donald Trump something. They told him he was winning the Republican primary race, that his message and style were connecting with voters, that he was more popular than any of his rivals.
The day sure looked like the debut of the Democratic Party's 2016 ticket. The pair coordinated outfits, spoke glowingly about one another, wrapped arms around each other and unified a fractured party at a crucial moment in this campaign.
Since Hillary Clinton became the presumptive Democratic nominee for president, two questions remained: Who will she pick as her running-mate and how will she win over Bernie Sanders supporters on the left? In an apparent act of highlighting party unity, Clinton and progressive Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren campaigned at the Cincinnati Museum Center at Union Terminal Monday in front of a crowd of over 2,000 waving signs that read "Love Trumps Hate" and "Girl Power." This marked the first time the newly-found political alliance have campaigned together.
SweePee Rambo and owner Jason Wurtz celebrate Friday after winning the 2016 World's Ugliest Dog Contest at the Sonoma-Marin Fair in Petaluma, California. A 17-year-old Chinese Crested Chihuahua with legs bowed out like a frog and an oozing sore is the winner of this year's World's Ugliest Dog contest.
When FBI Director James Comey discussed on national television the massacre at an Orlando nightclub, he made an off-the-cuff policy decision not to speak the gunman's name. "You will notice that I am not using the killer's name, and I will try not to do that," Comey said during the live news conference.
It seems political fundraising by those who support Hillary Clinton is far exceeding those who would contribute to Donald Trump. Trump indicates that is because of "special interests" that would support Clinton in return for favors.
It seems the Senate Majority Leader is running away from the Trumpster Fire as fast as he possibly can. During an interview on ABC's This Week, Sen. Mitch McConnell was asked by host George Stephanopoulos about Donald Trump's fiasco of a press conference in Scotland and his tanking poll numbers.
Donald Trump has doomed his candidacy by promoting a "speech of hate and divisiveness," irrevocably alienating himself from the vast majority of Hispanic voters, according to one of America's top Hispanic news executives. Isaac Lee, president of news and digital for Univision, the nation's leading Spanish-language network, says a series of slights, from Trump's negative characterization of immigrants and repeated pledge to build a wall on the border to his recent attacks on a federal judge of Mexican descent, have made him an unacceptable choice for voters who will play a key role in several battleground states this fall.
In this June 10, 2016 file photo, Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump gives a thumbs-up while addressing the Faith and Freedom Coalition's Road to Majority Conference in Washington. The billionaire running for president wants to convince millions of Americans to give him money.
Enrique Pena Nieto is heading to Quebec City first before dining with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in Toronto and then hitting the national capital on Tuesday for an official state visit. The Mexican president will then join Trudeau and U.S. President Barack Obama for Wednesday's North American Leaders Summit in Ottawa, commonly known as the Three Amigos.