Editor Brian Harrod Provides Comprehensive up-to-date news coverage, with aggregated news from sources all over the world from the Roundup Newswires Network
Donald Trump said that he'd "love" to debate Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, however, it won't be free for the Vermont senator. The presumptive GOP nominee said it might take at least $10 million for the debate to occur.
Sen. Bernie Sanders appears to be closing in on Hillary Clinton in California, which holds the last major battle of the presidential primaries early next month. A new Public Policy Institute survey of California released on Thursday found Sanders within two points of the former secretary of state, who garnered 46% support among likely Democratic primary voters.
It would have been a debate to remember: Two New Yorkers who couldn't be more different, one a white-haired socialist and the other a golden-maned capitalist , sparring angrily in California like two customers at a dry cleaner's. Donald Trump said Wednesday night on the Jimmy Kimmel Live ! that he was prepared to debate Bernie Sanders.
Bernie Sanders Libertarian Party eyes 2016 as breakthrough year Clinton urged to go liberal with vice presidential pick Sanders takes different position on superdelegates than he did in 2008 MORE 's suggestion that he might fight for the presidential nomination all the way to July's Democratic National Convention runs counter to the position he adopted in 2008.
Picking a liberal running mate would help the Democratic presidential front-runner unify the party, they say, driving young progressives to the polls against presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump Libertarian Party eyes 2016 as breakthrough year Clinton urged to go liberal with vice presidential pick Sanders takes different position on superdelegates than he did in 2008 MORE "She needs to do something in the coming weeks to show that she's also trying to unify the party," one Clinton surrogate said. "And that would be a clear signal."
The candidates in the race for the White House are making the case to voters across the country in a fight to win the Republican and Democratic nominations. Here's a look, as seen in images made by Associated Press photographers on the campaign trail.
Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders dueled for support Tuesday ahead of California's presidential primary, as the Vermont senator showed few signs of backing off his efforts to boost his longshot odds for the nomination. Sanders' campaign launched a $1.5 million ad buy in the state and announced it would seek a recanvass in last week's Kentucky primary, where he trailed Clinton by less than one-half of 1 percent.
In this photo taken May 7, 2016, Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a rally in Spokane, Wash. More than a million voters have already sent in their ballots for Washington state's presidential primary, Tuesday, May 24, 2016, but the only delegates at stake are for the Republican contest, because state Democrats ignore the primary and use the smaller caucus system to allocate their delegates to their national convention.
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Hillary Clinton is the likely Democratic nominee for president, but one thing remains unclear: Who will her running mate be? "We'll keep switching a and we're going to pick your vice president," DeGeneres explained on the latest edition of The Ellen DeGeneres Show . Scandal star Tony Goldwyn was an early favorite, picked ahead of Clinton's opponent, Sen. Bernie Sanders.
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Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders says a primary win in California would give him the momentum needed to secure the nomination and eventually the White House. Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders duke it out for support ahead of California's presidential primary, as the Vermont senator shows few signs of backing off his efforts to boost his longshot odds for the nomination.
"Our campaign and her campaign had reached an agreement on a number of debates, including one here in California in May," Sanders said during a rally in Santa Monica, California, Monday evening. "I gotta tell you this.
Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders says the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia and his push to make the party more inclusive could get "messy" but asserts in an interview with The Associated Press: "Democracy is not always nice and quiet and gentle." The Vermont senator, campaigning Monday ahead of California's primary against Hillary Clinton, said his supporters hope the party will adopt a platform at the summer convention that reflects the needs of working families, the poor and young people, not Wall Street and corporate America.
Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders says comedian Larry David shouldn't worry about his role on NBC's "Saturday Night Live." The Vermont senator joked in an interview with The Associated Press that he wants David to continue his job impersonating him on the late night show, which had its season finale last weekend.
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.
About 100 to 200 Sen. Bernie Sanders delegates stormed out of the Wells Fargo Arena Tuesday evening after Hillary Clinton secured the Democratic nomination for president. Many were angry at the result of the nomination process as well as the Democratic National Committee.
Bernie Sanders said Monday that the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia could get "messy" in July as he tries to advance a more progressive vision of the party's platform. The Vermont senator declared that "democracy is not always nice and quiet and gentle" during an interview with The Associated Press, as diehard supporters planned to shake up the convention and shape the party's future.