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"I think we're going to win, but the main thing is that we trounce him," says one increasingly confident volunteer A loud hum arose from a Santa Monica storefront crammed with folding tables and chairs where actors, producers, lawyers, moms with babies, marketing executives, retirees and teenagers doggedly worked the phones for Hillary Clinton in the waning days of the election. Anxious or optimistic but mostly determined to stop Donald Trump from winning the presidency, the energy in the room on the Sunday before the election was palpable.
In the days since the FBI dropped a bombshell into the presidential race with the discovery of new emails relevant to the Hillary Clinton server investigation, bureau investigators worked "around the clock" to review the large volume of emails, two law enforcement officials told CNN. Key to the effort was software that was refined from its previous uses for the review of emails found on a device belonging to Anthony Weiner, the disgraced former congressman and estranged husband of Clinton's top aide, Huma Abedin.
Shares were mostly higher in Asia on Monday after FBI Director James Comey told lawmakers during the weekend that the bureau had found no evidence to warrant criminal charges against presidential candidate Hillary Clinton in a trove of newly-discovered emails. Wall Street's proxy for Trump's chances at winning, the Mexican peso rebounded sharply against the dollar.
Hillary Clinton spoke to supporters in Manchester, New Hampshire, on Sunday. She spoke about the presidential election as a "crossroads." Watch her full remarks.
With the not insignificant exception of Donald Trump's army of die-hard supporters, there is an all but uniform consensus that Hillary Clinton remains the favourite to win this week's presidential election, despite her recent troubles. But there is increasingly spirited disagreement as to whether a Clinton victory is merely a likelihood, or something approaching a certainty.
GOP nominee Donald Trump drew attention to an issue that he thinks has received inadequate press coverage by invoking the death penalty at a rally Sunday night. "If I got 'em, it would not be a pretty picture.
Newly released emails from WikiLeaks suggest that the Democratic National Committee colluded with CNN in devising questions in April to be asked of then-Republican primary candidate Donald Trump in an upcoming interview. In an email to DNC colleagues on April 25 with the headline "Trump Questions for CNN," a DNC official with the email username DillonL@dnc.org asked for ideas for an interview to be conducted by CNN anchor Wolf Blitzer.
With just two days before the election, WikiLeaks late Sunday night released a new trove of emails apparently hacked from the Democratic Party, the latest dump from the website which has been targeting Democrats. The release of more than 8,000 emails came after WikiLeaks has, on a daily basis over four weeks, released more than 50,000 emails stolen from the private email account of Hillary Clinton's campaign chairman, John Podesta.
If the news that documentarian Michael Moore was releasing a surprise film called Michael Moore in TrumpLand had you expecting a rollicking, full-force attack on Donald Trump, prepare to be disappointed. Moore, one of filmmaking's best-known provocateurs, seems to be decidedly uninterested in provoking anyone with this new offering, which had its hastily arranged premiere in the United States on October 18 at the IFC Center in Manhattan.
Bill Clinton was approaching the midway point of his second term when scandal consumed his presidency. If elected Tuesday, his wife Hillary may not have to wait that long.
A student was escorted off stage at a campaign rally for Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton Saturday - despite the fact the campaign gave him a speaking slot - after he used the stage to denounce Clinton. That student, Kaleb Vanfosson, president of Iowa State University's Young Democratic Socialists club, began his short speech by ripping on Republican nominee Donald Trump and bringing attention to what he believes is a very important issue facing the nation: student loan debt.
In a letter sent Sunday, FBI Director James Comey told Congress that a review of newly discovered Hillary Clinton emails has "not changed our conclusions" from earlier this year that she should not face charges. Sent just two days before Election Day, the letter appeared to resolve any lingering ambiguity over the prospect that the Democratic presidential nominee could yet face a criminal indictment over her use of a private email sever as secretary of state.
While Hillary Clinton narrowly leads Donald Trump in the RealClearPolitics polling average, an on-the-ground report from Pennsylvania paints a different picture of the presidential race. Kevin O'Leary, "Shark Tank" investor and founder of O'Leary Wines, told Benzinga in an interview that an experience with a crowd of fellow wine aficionados in Philadelphia last week changed his perception of the race.
Ivanka Trump stopped in Fairview Twp. on Sunday to encourage supporters of her father, GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump, to do their part to get out the vote on Tuesday and spent some time offering insights about him that she thinks would make him the right person to send to the White House next year.
Black pastors are urging their congregants to get out and vote, hoping to inspire a late flood of African-American turnout that could help propel Hillary Clinton to victory. In Detroit, a pastor spoke of voting and citizenship.
Bruce Springsteen is set to join a powerful lineup of guests that includes President Barack Obama, First Lady Michelle Obama, Bill Clinton, Chelsea Clinton and Jon Bon Jovi on Monday night in Hillary Clinton's final rally at Independence Mall in Philadelphia. Springsteen will perform alongside Bon Jovi and urge Pennsylvanians, one of the largest groups of Clinton supporters, to turn out for Clinton on Tuesday.
I am voting for Hillary to ensure that Bernie Sanders becomes Chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee after the Election; and that Patrick Leahy becomes Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee. I am voting for Hillary in acknowledgement that climate destabilization is here now and wise action is important now in the face of this scientifically verified reality.