Editor Brian Harrod Provides Comprehensive up-to-date news coverage, with aggregated news from sources all over the world from the Roundup Newswires Network
It was one of Donald Trump's biggest lines at Sunday night's second presidential debate in St. Louis. But now his campaign manager says he didn't even mean it.
On Sunday night, Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton faced off against Republican nominee Donald Trump in the second presidential debate. The tone of the evening was set immediately when Clinton and Trump did not shake hands at center stage to start the event.
Rep. Marsha Blackburn thinks Donald Trump's casual boasts about grabbing women by the genitals are "indefensible" - but she still wants to change U.S. Senate rules so he push through his agenda. The Tennessee Republican said she could not defend those aggressively lewd remarks, but CNN's Chris Cuomo reminded Blackburn that she had defended Trump's comments "by proxy of supporting him to be president of the United States."
File photos of Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump, as Trump claimed Clinton should be in jail and accused former US president Bill Clinton of being "abusive to women" in a tense second presidential debate. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo.
Pat Robertson on Monday declared that Donald Trump was the "clear winner" of Sunday night's presidential debate, and the televangelist asserted that the GOP candidate's admission that he groped women was simply "macho" talk. The TV preacher argued that Trump was like the mythical Phoenix because he had performed well at the debate just days after the leak of a video tape, in which the Republican nominee bragged that he could grab women "by the pussy" without their permission because he was a star.
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has cast aside his running mate's suggestion that the U.S. should be ready to strike Syrian targets to protect civilians caught in the country's escalating humanitarian crisis. The comment Sunday evening in debate was yet another illustration of Republican vice presidential nominee Mike Pence's challenge as he attempts to validate the GOP nominee's unusually vague positions on international diplomatic and military affairs.
Things got ugly - and then uglier: Top takeaways from Clinton-Trump II The two nominees squared off in St. Louis in their second debate. Here are our takeaways.
Trump's Muslim ban 'morphs' into 'extreme vetting' The shift was highlighted during the second presidential debate. Check out this story on AlamogordoNews.com: http://usat.ly/2dZ3UEQ In a bitter debate filled with tension and insult, Hillary Clinton declared that Donald Trump's vulgar comments about women prove his unsuitability to be president.
Clinton said intelligence officials said this week that Russians were behind political hacking attacks in the U.S. Trump said, "She doesn't know if Russia is doing the hacking." Clinton is closer to the truth By Robert Farley , Eugene Kiely , Brooks Jackson , Lori Robertson , D'Angelo Gore , Vanessa Schipani , Zachary Gross , Jenna Wang and Sydney Schaedel Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump.
By the time you read this, we will know if Donald Trump pulled off a miracle and overcame his myriad personal shortcomings to win the second debate and maybe save his candidacy by holding Hillary Clinton accountable for the legacy of failure she intends to continue. But more likely he will have spent the town hall excusing his locker room trash talk while the wife of a serial sex abuser stood smiling that Stepfordy smile as she watched him chase rhetorical squirrels down into the sewer.
Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton listens to Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump during the second presidential debate. Donald Trump mischaracterized the record on Hillary Clinton's defense of her husband and her own treatment of women when he brought up Bill Clinton's sexual history and other episodes of the past.
Between Donald Trump's unhinged behavior at the first presidential debate and his nightmare news week , expectations for how he'd perform at the second debate were low. To recap: Trump spent the first debate babbling, lying and interrupting Democratic rival Hillary Clinton.
Not long after we had left college for the working world, a girlfriend told me she thought a job, an award, a gorgeous dress on a sale rack - anything, really - should go to the person who wants it most. Meg said this apropos of a colleague who was competing with her for a promotion at the publication for which they both worked.
Hillary Clinton came into Sunday's debate with the upper hand, after a bombshell video released Friday caught Trump on tape bragging about sexual assault. Those who watched Sunday's match between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump think Clinton won, preliminary polls find, but the results suggest the event did little to change the race.
Trump's assertion that he'd jail his political rival shocked many, who noted it's a dictatorial move not tolerated in the United States. ST. LOUIS - Donald Trump's overt threat Sunday night to put Hillary Clinton behind bars if he is elected president - an unprecedented declaration in modern U.S. politics - was met with applause by his top campaign surrogates.
Trump swings wildly, and lands a punch or two, but in the end knocks himself down -- if not out -- as Clinton keeps her cool. Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump came here knowing that he would be hounded about audio tapes in which he brags about his own sexual predations.
"Short-sighted, dangerous, demogogic rhetoric" were some of the words used by Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton to slam rival Donald Trump's plans to stop Muslims from entering the US, during the second presidential debate. With no niceties and handshake to break the ice, the two rivals walked on the stage at the Washington University here for the second presidential debate that turned nasty from the start over Trump's 2005 video of lewd and sexually explicit remarks against women.
Donald Trump on Sunday night issued a remarkable threat against Hillary Clinton, telling the Democratic presidential nominee he would seek to imprison her if he was elected next month. "If I win, I am going to instruct my attorney general to get a special prosecutor to look into your situation," Trump said, "because there has never been so many lies, so much deception."
The high spirits among the ranks of Donald Trump supporters are not because he dominated Hillary Clinton in their second debate Sunday night; he made points he wanted to make, and so did she. But he achieved something far more valuable than a textbook win, something many thought impossible.