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 is the Republican nominee, which is frightening.We must make sure his hateful rhetoric does not even come close... During the Labor Day weekend, when many people are celebrating and preparing for the upcoming school-year, Dakota Access, a... A Donald Trump White House would be a disaster, and this goes way beyond any ideological difference. As President Obama said,... Alicia Machado introduced Hillary Clinton at a Florida campaign event on Tuesday and Trump TV, otherwise known as Fox & Friends , couldn't start slinging mud fast enough.
The last time Chris Wilson and I discussed elections during a Bayoubuzz video interview, was shortly after the Democratic convention. At that time, the walls were caving in on the Republican Party and on Donald Trump.
If it still isn't entirely clear what Brexit means, then what does Donald Trump's boast that he will deliver a "Brexit times 10" electoral upset mean? Until now, many European investors will have given little thought to the prospect of a victory by Mr. Trump-or "Mr. Brexit" as he has taken to calling himself. Polls long suggested that Hillary Clinton had next week's U.S. presidential election in the bag.
The Associated Press asked 21 risk experts to analyze the pr... Graphic shows deaths caused by terrorism and deaths caused by weather events since 2001; 2c x 5 inches; 96.3 mm x 127 mm; WASHINGTON - It's a scary world out there, risk experts agree, but they say Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton often focus on the wrong dangers - fixing on hazards that are unlikely, or unlikely to cause massive pain. The Associated Press asked 21 risk experts to analyze the presidential campaign and list what they consider the five biggest threats to the world.
At a Lincoln Center gala that raised $3.1 million Tuesday night, Dave Matthews and Yissy Garcia, a woman drummer with a mohawk, played for Evercore Chief Executive Officer Ralph Schlosstein and Citigroup's head of corporate and investment banking, Raymond McGuire. Thank President Obama for giving the bankers the opportunity.
The blast, which sent flames and thick black smoke soaring over the forest, happened about a mile west of where... . Light from a light pole shows a house near a plume of smoke from a Colonial Pipeline explosion, Monday, Oct. 31, 2016, in Helena, Ala.
Cosby's lawyers pressed a judge Tuesday to keep the comedian's damaging deposition in a dec... . Bill Cosby, center, leaves after a hearing in his sexual assault case at the Montgomery County Courthouse Tuesday, Nov. 1, 2016, in Norristown, Pa.
Obama is heading back to North Carolina to help turn out the vote for Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Cl... WASHINGTON - President Barack Obama staunchly defended Hillary Clinton's use of private email as an "honest mistake," suggesting Wednesday that voters should discount innuendo-filled revelations that the FBI is looking into more emails just ahead of Election Day. Obama walked a careful line in his first public comments about FBI Director James Comey's decision to publicly disclose the emails' existence, which has roiled the campaign.
SEE ALSO: EXTRA Pollsters speak out on how they do what they do Hillary Clinton trails Donald Trump for the first time this campaign in who's seen as more honest and trustworthy, a sign of further possible fallout from renewed FBI scrutiny of Clinton-related emails. A steady six in 10 likely voters disapprove of how she's responded to the issue.
While the national presidential election is igniting political passions across the country, a number of school sites in the Alameda Unified School District are using this historic matchup to teach students about the meaning of democracy, the importance of voting, and the value of citizenship and civil discourse. Among the Election Day activities taking place across the district: At Lum Elementary School, some teachers have already had their students submit a mock vote for the Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton via "Every Kid Votes."
Obama is kicking off a week of campaigning for Democratic presiden... . Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton jokes about Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump during a rally in Sanford, Fla., Tuesday, Nov. 1, 2016.
Commuters scrambled Tuesday to find alternate ways to travel as transit workers in Philadelphia hit the picket lines after the city's main... . A pedestrian outside a locked rail station in west Philadelphia Tuesday, Nov. 1, 2016.
In this Thursday, Oct. 13, 2016 file photo, U.S. Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C. makes a comment during a live televised Senate debate with Democratic challenger Deborah Ross at UNC-TV studios in Research Triangle Park, N.C., Thursday, Oct. 13, 2016. Polls show Burr and Democrat challenger Deborah Ross are running neck-and-neck in a race that could help decide control of the senate.
Hillary Clinton is returning to Michigan one more time before next Tuesday, penciled in for a get out the vote rally in Detroit on Friday. Her campaign has also resurrected her TV ad buys in Michigan using part of the windfall of cash that poured in following the latest E-mail flap to fund new ads in three other states as well.
Corey Lewandowski's employer may have changed in his transition from Donald Trump's campaign to CNN, but his job didn't. As it was 18 months ago, Lewandowski's singular focus is getting Trump elected president.
With six days to go until Election Day, Republican Donald Trump, Democrat Hillary Clinton, and top surrogate speakers for both sides are rallying voters in the key battleground states. Here's the itinerary for Tuesday, Nov. 2: Donald Trump Mr. Trump is spending the day in Florida, with rallies in Miami, Orlando and Pensacola.
Strengthened by burgeoning support from women, Donald Trump is tied with Hillary Clinton with less than a week before the election, according to the latest IBD/TIPP poll released Wednesday. Trump, despite his lewd comments about women that surfaced from 11 years ago and the double-digit accusations levied against him for sexual harassment, is powered by returning support from women.
The Financial Times had endorsed Hillary Clinton for president, proclaiming that the Democratic nominee "is manifestly more competent than Trump with his braggadocio, divisiveness and meanness." "Despite her faults, Mrs. Clinton is eminently qualified to be the first woman elected to the White House," the newspaper stated.
Tom Cotton, the Arkansas senator, and rumored 2020 presidential hopeful seems to be sharpening his attack a bit ahead of schedule. Senator Cotton appeared on Hugh Hewitt's radio program and was asked to comment on the reopening of the Hillary Clinton email investigation and also, the FBI probe into the Clinton Foundation.