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Former U.S. Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum on Tuesday endorsed Donald Trump for president, saying he was swayed by Trump's list of possible Supreme Court nominees. Santorum, who dropped out of the presidential race in February and threw his support to Senator Marco Rubio, told Fox News: "The most important issue is preserving the Constitution of this country and a liberal Supreme Court will destroy it."
With Hillary Clinton heading into an almost certain general-election race against Donald Trump, Bill Clinton has begun to work out what type of role his wife would play in his third administration should she win the race. “She is the most qualified person to ever run for president, so I would not hesitate to draw on her experience and knowledge,” Mr. Clinton said.
In January DONALD TRUMP told HoWIE CARR it would be interesting to ask Bill Clinton the difference between him and Bill Cosby. The disgraced comedian, 78, learned the news inside a Norristown, Pennsylvania courtroom on Tuesday after Montgomery County prosecutors spent the morning presenting their case to the judge and laying out why they believe they have enough evidence to send the case to trial.
But it's been three weeks since Donald Trump secured the Republican nomination for president. And Paul Ryan has not yet endorsed the GOP candidate for president.
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump waves during a campaign event in Lawrenceville, N.J., on May 19, 2016. **FILE** more > Likely GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump and the Republican National Committee rolled out Tuesday a list of big-time fundraisers who will help raise cash for the fall elections, as the billionaire businessman takes another step away from the self-funded nature of his primary campaign.
Congratulations, you're now registered! Let us know what news and updates you want to hear about and we'll send them straight to your inbox. Ian Harris, who is originally from Marus Bridge but now lives in London, was shocked to receive a phone call from the campaign office for the controversial, larger-than-life Republican candidate to replace Barack Obama as president.
That's the message the media are sending with a spate of articles about the obstacles facing the Republican nominee. On the surface, it seems apparent that if Trump has trouble raising a billion dollars, does battle with a much smaller staff and has little turnout operation, he's ceding some crucial advantages to Hillary Clinton.
Trump holds his first preside... . FILE- In this Friday, May 6, 2016, photo, Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a rally in Eugene, Ore.
In the race to become the next president, Hillary Clinton is using a weapon to persuade voters some may not consider important in the political process - children. The Clinton campaign has rolled out an ad that takes Republican nominee Donald Trump's own words and uses them against him, showing wide-eyed children watching TV while Trump talks about theoretically shooting someone in the middle of New York City's Fifth Avenue, carrying people out on stretchers, mocking a disabled reporter, self-censoring a profanity that is easily deduced and making a comment many saw as a reference to a woman's menstrual cycle.
On rare occasions, Americans coalesce around a common cause, usually after some calamity - a terrorist attack, a natural disaster or, say, during a presidential election. Take today.
Donald Trump's campaign is privately giving Senate Republicans in tough reelection races its blessing to avoid the presumptive nominee if he campaigns in their states, the latest effort by the unconventional candidate to build goodwill with a nervous GOP establishment. Last week at an off-the-record lunch meeting in Washington, Trump adviser Paul Manafort told Senate Republican chiefs of staff that the Trump campaign wants to be helpful to GOP senators in tough races, according to three sources in the room.
Hillary Clinton raised Donald Trump's record with bankruptcy as a warning about how he would handle the economy, in an appearance Monday before union members in Detroit. Trump has filed four business bankruptcies in the last 30 years, all of which surrounded his casino holdings in Atlantic City.
Donald Trump wants to build another huge wall, this time to keep out the rising seas threatening to swamp his luxury golf resort in Ireland. The Republican presidential candidate has called climate change a "con job" and a "hoax."
CBS2 / KCAL9 CBS2/KCAL9 is part of CBS Television Stations, a division of CBS Corp. and one of the largest network-owned station groups in the country. CBS Studio City Broadcast Center 4200 Radford Avenue Studio City, CA [] Vermont Senator and presidential hopeful Bernie Sanders spoke to an enthusiastic crowd of supporters and vowed to continue his push for the Democratic nomination.
First, the good news for the Clintonistas: The competition with presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump for Latino voters is no competition at all. According to a new poll by Fox News Latino , Hillary Clinton makes mincemeat out of Trump with that important demographic.
Among the abundant ironies of this election cycle, there is this: We are now in the eighth year of the most liberal administration since Lyndon Johnson's. The primary elections reveal a national mood of anxiety, apprehension and anger, in turn reflecting stagnation at home and failure abroad.
The coming presidential race between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump begins in a virtual dead heat, a competition between two candidates viewed unfavorably by a majority of the current electorate and with voters motivated as much by whom they don't like as by whom they do, according to a Washington Post-ABC News poll.
The Senate Minority Leader said, "I have never ever seen a more flawed candidate than Donald Trump, never. I mean, this is a scary thing that 87 percent of the Republicans think he's great."