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Friday in Bristol, PA, while campaigning for Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton, Vice President Joe Biden acknowledged the lack of enthusiasm for his party's nominee. Biden said, "I know some of you, and some of the people you are trying to convince are not crazy about Hillary.
The candidates, their aides, their surrogates, even some of their ads, went quiet Friday, as swing-state Florida was pounded by Hurricane Matthew, coastal residents hunkered down in their homes and the 15 months of constant political chatter almost disappeared. Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton kept far away from the storm at their home bases in New York.
Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump have mainly steered around the hot-button issues that long have defined America's culture divide -- abortion, gay rights and religion. The new social battle lines are being drawn instead on race, gender and immigration.
Superstorm Sandy was widely blamed in 2012 for affecting the outcome of the presidential election but Hurricane Matthew won't likely have the same effect this time around, Fox News' Bill O'Reilly said Friday morning. "It seems like everybody's pretty well-organized," O'Reilly told Fox News' "Fox & Friends" program, while appearing on the show to speak about the network's 20th anniversary observation.
The presidential race has been dominated by debate over job creation, retirement, and other tenets of economic security, along with looming questions over race in America and threats from abroad. The future of Social Security makes up two of the top 10 crowdsourced and crowd-voted questions the public would like moderators of Sunday's town-hall-style debate to ask the presidential candidates.
Voters face a peculiar choice in this year's presidential election. Neither Donald Trump nor Hillary Clinton is particularly liked and both have high "unfavorables" with voters.
The term "implicit bias" was recently thrust into the U.S. presidential race, when Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton stated that "implicit bias is a problem for everyone, not just police" when asked about racial discrimination during the first debate. Andrew Scott Baron , director of the UBC Social Cognitive Development Lab, researches implicit bias and discusses how implicit bias forms and how people can change biases to minimize the negative effects they can cause.
From St. Louis and its suburbs south to Branson, voters here about an angst around next month's election. Many say they feel like they're choosing between the lesser of two evils, that the political dialogue feels sharply negative, and they are deeply fearful of what might happen if their preferred candidate loses.
For the Record: Hurricane Matthew gets pulled into the 2016 fray Truly, this election will leave no topic untouched. Check out this story on USATODAY.com: http://usat.ly/2dQFaOX Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton said Monday she'll crack down on arbitration clauses that limit consumers' ability to file lawsuits.
Hillary Clinton shakes hands with supporters during a campaign stop at Goodyear Hall and Theater on Oct. 3. Clinton is coming back to Ohio on Monday. Hillary Clinton will return to Ohio again on Monday, fresh off the second presidential debate and on the day before the state's voter registration deadline.
Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos won the Nobel Peace Prize on Friday for his efforts to end a five-decades-long civil war that has killed more than 200,000 people in the South American country. Hurricane Matthew's howling wind and driving rain pummeled Florida early Friday, starting what's expected to be a ruinous, dayslong battering of the Southeast coast.
From downward facing dog to child's pose, you can learn some yoga and do it for free! Steffanie from House of Aum talks about how you can ta It's an afternoon filled with food, football, and great competition as the Cincinnati Bengals take on the New England Patriots. But the real FILE - In this Sept.
In this Jan. 28, 2016 file photo, Moderator Megyn Kelly waits for the start of the Republican presidential primary debate in Des Moines, Iowa. Kelly's Fox News colleague, Sean Hannity, accused Kelly of backing Hillary Clinton on Wednesday, Oct. 5, 2016.
The character issue is back, with a vengeance. And the nation is likely to see it play out even more intensely in the second presidential debate between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump on Sunday and for the remainder of the race for the White House.
For the last year, all eyes have been focused on the future of the Republican Party. Pundits love to talk about the collapse of the party, the fractures between social and fiscal conservatives, the number of party leaders who say they will not vote for the GOP nominee and what the party will do to rebuild the day after the election - in the wake of what the media now believes will be the defeat of Donald Trump.
One would think that interpreting economic data would be a pretty straightforward venture. But with Election Day right around the corner, Republicans and Democrats have vastly different takes on the health of the U.S. economy.
J.S. Burgers Cafe chef Yasuhito Fukui prepares Mr. and Mrs. Burger featuring the U.S. presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump at the hamburger joint in Tokyo, Japan October 7, 2016. J.S. Burgers Cafe chef Yasuhito Fukui prepares Mr. and Mrs. Burger featuring the U.S. presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump at the hamburger joint in Tokyo, Japan October 7, 2016.
WASHINGTON - Two surveys of likely voters released Sunday put Hillary Clinton ahead of Donald Trump in advance of their final presidential debate this week. An NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll gave Clinton a 10-point lead over Trump, 51 percent to 41 percent, while an ABC News/Washington Post survey had a much narrower advantage for the former U.S. secretary of state, 50 percent to 46 percent.
Both Republican Mike Pence and Democrat Tim Kaine performed well during their televised debate Tuesday night. But Pence performed a big public service by hammering on the war on coal being waged by President Barack Obama and which presidential candidate Hillary Clinton wants to intensify.