Editor Brian Harrod Provides Comprehensive up-to-date news coverage, with aggregated news from sources all over the world from the Roundup Newswires Network
'We've got some stuff up our sleeve': Donald Trump's daughter-in-law hints that Republican nominee has an 'October surprise' to drop on Hillary Clinton Reclusive Facebook billionaire gives another $20M to defeat Trump one month after donating $15M to Hillary Clinton and other Democrats Is THIS the secret to happiness? Blogger reveals the 15 things you need to give up to feel content - including excuses, fear and control Crusaders in Lululemon! HUNDREDS of yoga-pant loving women march on man's Rhode Island home after he writes scathing letter claiming they look 'disturbing' on women over 20 'They have portion control, superior humor and their accent is more attractive than ours!' American woman reveals the 23 reasons why British people are BETTER than her countrymen 'He deserves to be remembered': Married at First Sight star Jamie Otis shares heartbreaking image of herself and husband ... (more)
At least 111 million individuals' data was compromised due to hacking or information technology problems in 2015, according to a report released by cloud security company Bitglass. Monitoring is no longer enough to protect compromised victims.
After public doubt and turmoil, Ohio's GOP chairman has decided to vote for his party's presidential nominee, Donald Trump. Chairman Matt Borges, an ally of Trump critic John Kasich, helped the Trump campaign set up in swing-state Ohio after the New York billionaire secured the nomination.
The people at "Saturday Night Live" are probably the only ones in America who don't want this election season to end anytime soon. Alec Baldwin and Kate McKinnon returned to play Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton again last weekend and, as we're come to expect, it was hilarious.
Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II is President of the North Carolina NAACP, founder and president of Repairers of the Breach , and co-author of The Third Reconstruction As early voting opened in my home state of North Carolina last week, Donald Trump continued to dominate headlines, despite Hillary Clinton's six-point lead in a national poll . The third and final presidential debate covered several areas of substantive difference between the two candidates, and millions of Americans are already voting for the future they want.
U.S. Senator Jeff Sessions joins Donald Trump on stage at a rally at Ladd-Peebles Stadium in Mobile, Ala., on August 21, 2015. A "dark money ally" of Hillary Clinton is calling on the Senate Ethics Committee to investigate Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., alleging Alabama's junior senator violated Senate rules for casting doubt on the legitimacy of the upcoming election, according to a complaint filed by the group on Monday.
Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren is warning Republican nominee Donald Trump that "nasty women" will come out in droves to help send Hillary Clinton to the White House. Warren was joining Clinton at a rally Monday in Manchester, New Hampshire.
Election Day just 15 days off, Donald Trump fought to preserve his narrow path to the presidency in must-win Florida on Monday. Hillary Clinton worked to slam the door on her Republican opponent in New Hampshire.
Donald Trump, shown in Gettysburg, Pa., on Saturday, is now all but certain to lose the presidential race, polls show. President Barack Obama is campaigning furiously for Democrats in tight local races, such as in Las Vegas on Saturday, shown here.
Vice President Joe Biden will be in Pittsburgh campaigning for Hillary Clinton on Tuesday while rocker Jon Bon Jovi will play a concert supporting the Democratic presidential nominee on Thursday. Biden is scheduled to speak at Chatham University at 11:30 a.m. for what's billed as a Get Out The Vote event.
Fifty counties will open polling places on Monday, including the state's largest counties: Broward, Duval, Hillsborough, Miami-Dade, Orange and Palm Beach. The remaining counties will start in the coming week.
As the final presidential debate lingers like a Halloween pinata full of October surprises, voters may be less committed to one or the other candidate than the numbers suggest. Lest you suddenly seek the highest perch from which to hurl yourself, this is strictly my personal unscientific prediction, based on instinct, experience and conversations with hundreds of voters across the country.
"Do the right thing and elect Deborah Ross to go to the United States Senate!" Clinton said at a rally in Charlotte, North Carolina Sunday. In Philadelphia a day earlier, Clinton talked up Democratic Senate candidate Katie McGinty.
A man watches a TV screen showing the presidential debate between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump in Seoul, South Korea. October 20, 2016 Election Day is about two weeks away, and Takeaway Washington Correspondent Todd Zwillich is here to give you the latest on what you should know before November 8th in his weekly "State of the Race" segment.
Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton has a 6-point lead over Republican challenger Donald Trump, with more GOP voters seemingly abandoning their party's nominee. A Fox News poll of likely voters showed Clinton is leading Trump 45 percent to 39 percent.
"I want to reassure the public that Ohio is a place where it is easy to vote and it is hard to cheat," Ohio Secretary of State Jon Husted said. Below left, Bishop Daniel Thomas is flanked by Deacons Paul Schreiner, left, and Scott Woods at an evening prayer service held in 2014, the day before Bishop Thomas' installation as the eighth bishop of Toledo, at Our Lady, Queen of the Most Holy Rosary Cathedral.
"Secretary of State Hillary Clinton allowed thousands of criminal aliens to be released because their home countries wouldn't take them back, because they're smart. They don't want to take back killers and drug dealers and all of the people that we're sending back.
There is palpable momentum for Democrat Hillary Clinton in Arizona, a state so traditionally Republican that her party's nominee for president has carried it just once in the past 64 years. Encouraged by Donald Trump's failure to unite the GOP in Arizona, long-hungry Democrats are scrambling to capitalize in the campaign's final weeks.
Hillary Clinton calls the scourge of heroin and opioid addiction a "quiet epidemic." Donald Trump marvels that overdoses are a problem in picturesque American communities.
Hillary Clinton has a detailed plan on how to stop police brutality, especially when it comes to the killing of unarmed African-Americans at the hands of law enforcement. Donald Trump hasn't said much about the issue, other than that he's the "law-and-order" candidate and police officers are "the most mistreated people in the country."