Editor Brian Harrod Provides Comprehensive up-to-date news coverage, with aggregated news from sources all over the world from the Roundup Newswires Network
A new poll from the University of Houston may have Texas Republicans more nervous heading into a presidential election than they have in decades. According to the University of Houston poll, Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has support from 41 percent of the state's likely voters to Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton's 38 percent support in the state.
I realize my plea is in vain. We have three more weeks of this appalling spectacle in which a ridiculous comic-book villain - a cross between the Joker and the Penguin - is trying his best to destroy American democracy.
London: Hillary Clinton's obvious look of disdain for her opponent in the last tv debate has been dubbed 'Resting Hillary Face'. But scientific research suggests your face really can determine your fortune.
Baraka, a longtime political activist who founded the U.S. Human Rights Network, is the Green Party candidate for vice president. He and running mate Jill Stein will appear on the ballot in 45 states, including Michigan.
Donald Trump is bringing President Barack Obama's Kenyan-born half-brother, Malik, to Wednesday's third and final presidential debate, a campaign aide confirmed to CNN. Hillary Clinton will be joined at Wednesday's debate by two well-known billionaires who are backing her campaign, in what may be an attempt to rattle Republican nominee by subtly questioning his own net worth.
When Donald Trump charges that the media are plotting against him, he often points to the hacked private emails of Hillary Clinton's campaign chairman, now available for the world to see on WikiLeaks. In another presidential election, they just might be.
Pathological liars rarely stumble into telling the truth - it does nothing for them. In the case of Donald Trump inciting his faithful about a rigged election system, he has accidentally blurted out the truth.
North Korea hopes that Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump will win the race for the White House over his Democratic rival Hillary Clinton, a US broadcaster reported Wednesday, citing a Japanese journalist who has made a visit to the North. Keisuke Fukuda, an editor at Japan's Toyo Keizai magazine specializing in Korean affairs, said in an interview with the Voice of America, "People at the North Korean government and public institutions show an interest in the US presidential election and appears to wait for its outcome cautiously."
Former Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney is sticking to his guns on the matter of Donald Trump. Speaking to the Economic Club of Southwestern Michigan Tuesday, Romney said Trump has "failings of a personal nature" that Romney can't look past.
Donald Trump is still winning in the deep red state, but his advantage has dropped precipitously from double digits to under 5 percent in the last two weeks. The last three polls in the state show him ahead of Hillary Clinton by only 2 points in a All of those most recent polls were conducted after the Oct. 7 release of a tape in which Trump bragged about sexually assaulting women.
In this photo taken Monday, Oct. 17, 2016, Republican U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski listens during a meet-and-greet at her campaign headquarters in Juneau, Alaska. Murkowski says the presidential race has created a level of uncertainty for down-ticket races, including her own.
The time couldn't be more fitting to say American women have it in their power to do Donald Trump in. They outnumber men from cradle to grave and outrun them to the ballot.
JULY 27: Sen. Chris Murphy delivers remarks on the third day of the Democratic National Convention at the Wells Fargo Center, July 27, 2016 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton received the number of votes needed to secure the party's nomination.
As Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has consistently declined in the polls, he's decided that the numbers don't matter anymore. Trump has been pushing the idea that the November election will be "rigged," and now he's saying that he doesn't believe the polls that say he's trailing Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton.
A scattering of pro-Donald Trump protesters waved signs Tuesday, Oct. 18, 2016, outside the Miracle Mile office of Gloria Allred, the attorney representing Summer Zervos, an “Apprentice” contestant who claims Trump forced himself on her. Supporters of Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump staged a protest Tuesday outside the Los Angeles office of attorney Gloria Allred, who is representing Summer Zervos, who claims she was a victim of unwanted sexual advances by Trump.
Maine Gov. Paul LePage says the election will be rigged this year, even in the state that has elected him twice. During his weekly dial-in to conservative radio station WVOM, LePage said he agreed with Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump that there will be election fraud in November.
New poll numbers are out saying that Republican Presidential nominee Donald Trump is losing ground in Kentucky, but that Republican Senator Rand Paul is gaining ground. The controversies over alleged sex scandals, Wall Street speeches and the use of email haven't gone unnoticed, according to a poll conducted by LEX 18 Political Commentator Bob Babbage.
Facing scrutiny over possibly not paying federal income tax for almost two decades, Donald Trump turned the tables on Hillary Clinton during the heated second presidential debate. The New York Times obtained a few pages of Trump's 1995 personal tax returns , revealing a $916 million loss that would have allowed him to legally avoid paying taxes for 18 years.
The "artist" who erected a naked Hillary statue on Wall Street has no online presence and his identity remains a question mark-but we tracked down the most likely candidate. This morning, a naked statue of an overweight Hillary Clinton being suckled by the head of a banker was erected outside of the Bowling Green subway station in lower Manhattan, where it stood for almost two hours.