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Economists polled by Reuters are looking for non-farm employment to have risen by 175,000 in October from 156,000 in September. The dollar clawed back some ground against its major peers on Friday ahead of the US non-farm payrolls report later in the day, but remained captive to jitters over a tightening US presidential election race.
SC: Cher dazzles at Joumana fundraiser for Hillary Also, costumes reign supreme at Cutraro birthday party, and Fox 2 set gets an extreme makeover Check out this story on detroitnews.com: http://detne.ws/2f0cHtT Metro Detroit attorney Joumana Kayrouz hosted a spectacular bash at her lavish Bloomfield Hills home on Monday with a very special guest - none other than Cher . A political fundraiser for Hillary Clinton for president, more than 300 people piled into the posh digs, paying anywhere from $125 to $5,000.
He told us that seven years into the recovery from the Great Recession, America still has problems with debt, jobs and overall economic growth. Tonight, Goss tells us what he thinks the new president will have to deal with and what he or she could and should do to make things better.
The Rev. Joshua Nink, right, prays with Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump after a Jan. 31 service at First Christian Church in Council Bluffs, Iowa.
That's the uphill battle Republican challenger H. Powell Dew Jr. of Stantonsburg has to climb in his attempt to upset longtime incumbent U.S. Rep. G.K. Butterfield, a Democrat, in the race for the 1st Congressional District seat in Tuesday's election. Dew, a pastor who sits on the Stantonsburg Town Council, said from talking to his legion of supporters, he feels a change in District 1 is needed.
With five days left to Election Day, Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Kaine made a strong appeal to Latinos during a speech Thursday in Phoenix delivered entirely in Spanish. Democratic VP nominee Tim Kaine uses Spanish to court Arizona Latinos, attack GOP nominee Donald Trump With five days left to Election Day, Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Kaine made a strong appeal to Latinos during a speech Thursday in Phoenix delivered entirely in Spanish.
Asian shares extended their losses Friday as nervous investors fretted over the potential outcome of next week's U.S. presidential election, which has become too close to call. KEEPING SCORE: Japan's Nikkei 225 lost 1.5 percent to 16,879.91 and Hong Kong's Hang Seng edged 0.04 percent lower to 22,671.51.
Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Kaine on Thursday delivered what may be the first presidential campaign speech entirely in Spanish as part of Hillary Clinton's push into traditionally Republican Arizona. The senator from Virginia spoke entirely in Spanish for about half hour a small crowd in a largely Hispanic area of Phoenix.
Daniel Richman: "We Don't Know What's In [The Emails], And It's Entirely Possible That There's Nothing In Them" Daniel Richman, a Columbia Law School professor and adviser to FBI Director James Comey, criticized the media's poor coverage of the investigation into Hillary Clinton's emails taking Comey's recent letter announcing the FBI's review of possible new emails out of context. Richman criticized the media for sensationalizing Comey's letter to Congress on newly found emails from Clinton adviser Huma Abedin without explaining that "We don't know what's in them, and it's entirely possible that there's nothing in them."
Hillary Clinton is rushing to secure Michigan and bolster the Democratic Party's blue wall of upper Midwestern states that have backed the party's presidential nominee for two decades. Clinton is rallying Democrats on Friday in Detroit, where a large turnout of black voters has long been crucial to success.
Donald Trump's wife, Melania, made a rare appearance on the campaign trail on Thursday, pledging to focus on combatting online bullying and serve as an advocate for women and children if her husband is elected to the White House. Her description of the perils of social media seemed at odds with her husband's divisive and bullying rhetoric throughout the campaign.
FBI agents seeking an investigation into the Clinton Foundation made a presentation to Justice Department lawyers about the allegations they wanted to pursue, but public corruption prosecutors did not want to partner with them based on concerns about the strength of the information they received, two people familiar with the matter said Thursday. The meeting at the Justice Department took place in February and reflected the conflicting views of prosecutors and investigators, according to two individuals who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity to discuss private conversations within the government.
Hillary Clinton saturated the airwaves and deployed star surrogates to battleground states Thursday, looking to snuff-out an eleventh-hour insurgency that has put Donald Trump at the gates of the White House. [WASHINGTON] Hillary Clinton saturated the airwaves and deployed star surrogates to battleground states Thursday, looking to snuff-out an eleventh-hour insurgency that has put Donald Trump at the gates of the White House.
SCSU survey: Minnesotans favor Clinton Survey finds gulf between Trump, Clinton supporters over immigration, direction of country Check out this story on sctimes.com: A statewide survey conducted by St. Cloud State University found Minnesotans favor Hillary Clinton over Donald Trump for president by a considerable margin, with women voters heavily weighted toward Clinton. Clinton led Trump 46 percent to 35 percent in the scientific telephone survey of a random sample of 431 Minnesotans conducted Oct. 19-30.
The U.S. Senate Debate for Louisiana gets underway at Georges Auditorium including David Duke, a convicted felon and Ku Klux Klan grand wizard, attorney Caroline Fayard, and U.S. Rep. John Fleming at Dillard University in New Orleans, La. Wednesday, Nov. 2, 2016.
In this Oct. 19, 2016 file photo, Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton and Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump debate during the third presidential debate at UNLV in Las Vegas. Headed for history books, the duel between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump became a battle of "nasty women" and "bad hombres" vs. "deplorables" and voters who are "irredeemable."
Tuesday I wrote about the scandal of Donna Brazile passing questions to the Clinton campaign and noted that, so far, the media hadn't seemed particularly interested in investigating the other half of this transaction, i.e. what happened to the questions after the Clinton camp received them. Today, someone finally asked the question directly to Clinton campaign manager Robby Mook and he refused to give a direct answer.
Since Chuck Grassley isn't going to use his Judiciary Committee for anything like Supreme Court hearings, he's going to use it to kickstart the investigations into Hillary Clinton and whether President Obama's administration had anything to do with the not-scandal of Clinton's emails. No, really.
North Carolina Sen. Richard Burr is walking back from his promise to block any nominees Democrat Hillary Clinton would make to the U.S. Supreme Court if she's elected president. Burr told a private gathering of Republican supporters on Saturday that if re-elected to a third term he would do everything possible "to make sure that four years from now, we're still going to have an opening on the Supreme Court."
Fox News' Judge Napolitano tore into FBI Director James Comey for injecting the FBI into the political process, informing Congress about Anthony Wiener's laptop, linking it to Hillary Clinton without any proof and violating his oath of office and due process. Judge told Fox News' Shep Smith, "There was absolutely no duty, obligation, or right for him to announce that the Clinton investigation had been opened."