Editor Brian Harrod Provides Comprehensive up-to-date news coverage, with aggregated news from sources all over the world from the Roundup Newswires Network
Democratic Party presidential nominee Hillary Clinton angrily reacted to a protester shouting "Bill Clinton is a rapist" at a campaign rally in Fort Lauderdale, Florida Tuesday night, saying, ""I am sick and tired of the negative, dark, divisive, dangerous vision and behavior of people who support Donald Trump," according to reports. Video posted to Twitter by ABC News reporter Josh Haskell shows an animated man wearing a white Bill Clinton 'Rape' t-shirt and holding a green "Bill Clinton is a rapist" sign being ejected from the rally as Clinton reacts angrily on stage.
Knocking on doors. Pounding the pavement. Volunteers are scrambling for votes across all the states up for grabs, and in Iowa, the urgency is palpable.
U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch continues to have confidence in FBI Director James Comey despite his controversial decision to renew a probe related to Hillary Clinton's use of a private e-mail system, an official said. Comey and Lynch spoke briefly after a meeting in Washington on Monday, according to the official, who requested anonymity to discuss a private conversation.
Donald Trump is getting a $10 million advertising boost from a super PAC attacking Hillary Clinton as too scandal-plagued for the White House. With this late ad buy, Future 45 and a companion nonprofit group are now the top big-money helper to the Republican presidential nominee.
A dip in African-American turnout has knocked Democratic early voting numbers off their 2012 pace in key battleground states like North Carolina. The trend is also evident in early vote data from other swing states that could play key roles in deciding the election, including Florida and Georgia.
Well, OK, let's think about these words of Jill Stein for a moment, as the 2016 presidential race enters, oh, Lord, its final month - and the possibility still looms that this country could elect a hybrid of Benito Mussolini and Jim Crow its next, uh, commander in chief.
Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller has been mired in a number of controversies and scandals since he took office. Take a look at some of the most interesting.
And Rachel Maddow told Weld tonight, "I can't imagine that you wouldn't tell a person in North Carolina and Ohio to vote for Hillary Clinton ." She thinks a moderate Republican like Weld does not want to dare risk the possibility of a Trump presidency.
When you've been somebody's top aide for over two decades and they start calling you "one of my staffers," something's going on: Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton blasted the FBI again Monday - and this time brought up the bureau's probe into emails maintained by longtime aide Huma Abedin - dismissing the idea she did anything wrong while minimizing the role of her close staffer. 'Now they apparently want to look at emails of one of my staffers - and by all means they should look at them,' Clinton said, bringing up the FBI attack at the start of a rally before a room packed with students at Kent State University.
CNN chose an odd way to announce some news about itself Monday: It waited until reporters called to disclose the fact that, yes, it had parted ways with one of its longtime commentators, Donna Brazile. The cable network accepted Brazile's resignation on Oct. 14 after it learned about her undisclosed role in backA channeling questions intended for a CNN-sponsored primary debate to Hillary Clinton's campaign.
The latest hotness on the right is to promise not just to hold up Senate hearings on Merrick Garland until we get a new president, but to hold up all hearings for all Supreme Court nominees forever if Hillary Clinton wins: That prospect - which could impact every aspect of American life including climate regulations, abortion and gun rights - was first raised by Senator John McCain of Arizona, then Ted Cruz of Texas and now Richard Burr of North Carolina, who CNN reported Monday talked up the idea at a private event over the weekend.
FBI Director James Comey has been taking heat from both parties in Congress over agency investigations, but for competing reasons. AFP Photo/Jim Watson/Getty Images With one week to go until the election, Congress's ire is focused on one man: FBI Director James Comey.
Democratic Party officials filed lawsuits in four states this week against presidential candidate Donald Trump and the Republican Party, accusing campaign officials and supporters of seeking to threaten minorities to keep them from voting. With the bitter election just days away from a seeming conclusion, these lawsuits were part of a flurry of legal action that could alter what voters experience on Election Day and how party officials can approach voters going forward.
FBI agents are plumbing hundreds of thousands of emails in search of potentially incriminating evidence against Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton, in a high pressure probe seven days before the US presidential election. What will come out of it and when is not known, but the impact of the FBI's bombshell discovery of a new trove of Clinton emails is already reverberating in the neck-and-neck race for the White House.
A new poll in Texas shows that Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump's lead has swelled to 12 points over opponent Hillary Clinton. The KTVT-CBS 11/Dixie Strategies Poll reveals that if the election for president was held today, 52 percent of likely voters said they would vote for Trump, and 39 percent said they would vote for Clinton, reported CBSDFW.
Stressed voters can swing at Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump at a driving range in Texas where photos of the presidential candidates are displayed as targets for speeding golf balls. Alpine Target Golf Center in Longview has hung the portraits on round hay bales since late October.
Donald Trump has been drawing large, capacity crowds at his rallies across the country over the past week, dwarfing - by far - most of the crowds at Hillary Clinton events. "Crowds don't vote," as the saying goes.
The latest Wikileaks data dump has revealed how CNN chief political analyst Gloria Borger emailed Hillary Clinton campaign chief John Podesta telling him he was a "star" and describing how she had been in "gop hell." In a short email to Podesta entitled "U r a tv star!", Borger wrote, "I have been in gop hell.
Only days before the presidential election, the FBI released a 17-year-old archive of documents from a long-closed investigation into Bill Clinton's presidential pardon of a fugitive financier, prompting questions from Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign about its timing. The 129 pages of heavily censored material were published Monday on the FBI's Freedom of Information Act webpage and noted by one of the bureau's Twitter accounts Tuesday.
The latest polling data from Maine's second congressional district has Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton in a statistical tie , exactly a week before the 2016 presidential election. The latest Emerson poll has Clinton leading Trump by two points, or 44 percent to Trump's 42 percent, whilst Libertarian Gary Johnson and the Green Party's Jill Stein are at six percent and two percent respectively.