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 presidential nominee Hillary Clinton arrives at a campaign rally with Vice President Joe Biden, August 15, 2016, in Scranton, Pennsylvania. Hillary Clinton is reportedly aiming to make Vice President Joe Biden her secretary of state if she wins the presidential election on November 8, as is widely predicted.
After all the shouting this election season, perhaps it's no wonder AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson is proposing a tone-deaf $85.4 billion megamerger with Time Warner. On paper, the deal may have seemed like a shoo-in -- after all, the Department of Justice approved a similar merger between Comcast and NBC Universal in 2011.
So The Daily News' resident liberals endorse Hillary Clinton, the most corrupt person to ever run for president . The Wikileaks releases demonstrate the use of her office to trouser hundreds of millions of dollars as well as her massive collusion with the national liberal media.
Speaking at a rally in Tampa, Fla., Wednesday, Hillary Clinton told the story of a leukemia patient named Steven who "ditched his oxygen tank," as Clinton told it, to vote early. The Clinton camp is putting a hard push on to turn out the vote before Nov. 8. The number of people taking advantage of early voting could hit record levels this year.
New numbers released Thursday by the state Division of Elections show more than 585,000 voters have gone to early voting sites that opened in 50 counties. Another 1.54 million voters sent in their ballots by mail.
Then-U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton meets with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem on November 21, 2012. Clinton had joined international efforts to broker a ceasefire amid Israeli airstrikes and Hamas rocket attacks.
Donald Trump got a morale boost this week -- but it likely won't be enough to propel him to the White House. After weeks of devastating headlines, the Republican nominee seemed to give himself a break.
Donald Trump has repeated it so much it's almost part of his stump speech: He's going to put $100 million of his own money into his campaign before Election Day. But new filings show he's got a long way to go if he's going to hit that mark.
Washington, Oct 28: Hillary Clinton is "absolutely ready" to be the US' commander-in-chief on day one as the Democratic presidential nominee and former secretary of state has more experience and exposure than any candidate "in our lifetime", First Lady Michelle Obama has said. During a rare joint appearance with Clinton at a North Carolina election rally yesterday, Michelle contrasted Clinton's vision of a "powerful, vibrant and strong" nation with Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump's vision of "hopelessness and despair".
Media reports of possible voter-suppression activity involving groups that support Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump have swelled concerns about widespread voter intimidation in the November general election. Trump has repeatedly excited his base with charges about a "rigged" election and he has claimed that reporters and Democratic political operatives are in cahoots against him.
NK US , Washington, Oct 28 : President Barack Obama will campaign for Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton almost everyday in the final week leading to the November 8 election, a White House aide said. Obama will also ramp up his efforts to boost Democrats in down-ballot races through additional travel, robocalls, radio spots and endorsements, the aide said on Thursday.
WorldNetDaily is somewhere between desperate and disengaged when it comes to the election -- its tired attacks on Hillary are like so much poo flung at the wall and because nobody believes WND , none of what they're doing is sticking. First came an article by Corsi claiming that "experts" say that "Watergate pales in comparison," citing right-wing activist Thomas Lipscomb saying the undercover video investigation by James O'Keefe and the Wikileaks' publication of Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta's emails provide "ample proof of criminal activity that would have made both Donald Segretti and G. Gordon Liddy blush."
The possibility that a third-party conservative, Evan McMullin, could win Utah in the presidential election has sparked much loose talk and hyperventilation about what it would portend. Some say it would "cost" Donald Trump the White House.
The Washington Post had an exasperating piece on Tuesday on their fairly awful PostEverything blog . The piece, in which a 52-year-old wife and mother in Falmouth, Maine recounts the night that she and her friends drove along their town's major street swiping yard signs touting the GOP nominee for the Presidency.
Cambridge Analytica chief executive Alexander Nix is pictured at the company's office on Fifth Avenue in the old Charles Scribner's Sons Building, 10 blocks south of Trump Tower in New York. Cambridge Analytica chief executive Alexander Nix is pictured at the company's office on Fifth Avenue in the old Charles Scribner's Sons Building, 10 blocks south of Trump Tower in New York.
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump doubled down on his assertion that slain U.S. Army Capt. Humayun Khan, a Muslim soldier who died in Iraq in 2004, "would be alive today" if Trump had been in the White House.
Julian Assange has claimed the Hillary Clinton campaign has attacked the servers being used by WikiLeaks. Despite the Ecuadorian embassy shutting down his internet until the US election is over, the website will continue publishing, according to Assange.
Donald Trump's former campaign adviser Roger Stone reportedly has plans to write a book about this year's presidential race despite signing a non-disclosure agreement. "My lawyers believe the nondisclosure agreement I signed is unenforceable," Mr. Stone told The New York Post in an interview published Thursday.
Sen. Ted Cruz's suggestion of an indefinite Supreme Court vacancy under a President Hillary Clinton raises questions about the credibility and integrity of Republicans who have said the next president should get to the choose who fills the vacancy, White House spokesman Josh Earnest said Thursday. Earnest was asked during Thursday's White House press briefing about the Texas Republican's statement that there is a long historical precedent for a Supreme Court operating with fewer justices.