Editor Brian Harrod Provides Comprehensive up-to-date news coverage, with aggregated news from sources all over the world from the Roundup Newswires Network
Donald Trump's campaign is saying the Republican nominee told Egypt's president that he has "high regard for peace-loving Muslims." Trump promised El-Sissi that, were he to be elected, the United States would be "a loyal friend" to Egypt, according to a readout of the meeting provided by the Republican's campaign.
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Two billionaires are planning to open their pocketbooks for Republican nominee Donald Trump in the final six weeks of the election, as the businessman continues to lag behind Democrat Hillary Clinton in fundraising. Billionaire casino owner Sheldon Adelson and his wife, Miriam, are planning to spend $45 million to boost Republicans in the next two months, including at least $5 million to help Trump, according to a person familiar with the plans.
In his speech, Pence told the crowd that Democrats are painting a rosy picture of the economy but that growth has been weak. He says it's keeping more people in poverty.
With swing-state polls reportedly driving some nervous Hillary Clinton supporters to check out housing prices in Canada, attention is turning to what many in both parties thought the impossible - a Donald Trump presidency and what it might look like. Though the temperament and personality hardly match, there are enough parallels between the high-energy business tycoon and Dwight D. Eisenhower to make the avuncular Ike's Oval Office tenure six decades ago a predictor of a Trump presidency's features.
Hillary Clinton accused Donald Trump of giving "aid and comfort" to Islamic terrorists Monday, declaring his anti-Muslim rhetoric helps groups like ISIS recruit new fighters. Trump showed no sign of changing and insisted the U.S. should "use whatever lawful methods are available" to get information from the Afghan immigrant arrested in the weekend's bombings.
COVERING THE CLINTON CAMPAIGN AND IS LIVE IN PHILADELPHIA. MATT: HILLARY CLINTON CAME TO PHILADELPHIA AND SPECIFICALLY TEMPLE UNIVERSITY TO MAKE A PITCH TO YOUNG VOTERS.
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Speaking at a Philadelphia university Monday, Clinton made her case to millennial voters, noting that "even if you are totally opposed to Donald Trump, you may still have some questions about me. I get that."
Hillary Clinton held a Monday press conference in which she addressed the recent bombs planted in New York City and New Jersey , telling reporters outside her campaign plane that the Islamic State terror group has "seized" and amplified Donald Trump's rhetoric. The press conference in White Plains, N.Y., came as authorities announced they are seeking a person of interest in the mostly unsuccessful bomb attacks: Ahmad Khan Rahami , a 28-year-old U.S. citizen who was born in Afghanistan.
Bill Clinton Bill Clinton: State 'wouldn't do anything they shouldn't do' Candidates can't campaign as dividers and govern as unifiers Two parties use legitimate means to mask rigged debates MORE in an interview said some donors may have given to the Clinton Foundation to gain influence with the Clintons, but that he trusted the State Department to handle possible conflicts of interest when his wife was secretary of State. "It was natural for people who've been our political allies and personal friends to call and ask for things," Bill Clinton told Steve Inskeep in an interview broadcast Monday on NPR's "Morning Edition."
Gary Johnson says his running mate is not dropping out of the race: Bill Weld is in this "for the long-haul" https://t.co/xZIyosVupP Gary Johnson Gary Johnson: 'No chance' Weld drops off ticket Poll: Trump, Clinton in tight race in Florida Libertarian VP candidate: Talk of defecting for Clinton 'wishful thinking' MORE insisted Monday there's "no chance" his running mate Bill Weld will leave the ticket for fear the two are taking votes from Hillary Rodham Clinton Gary Johnson: 'No chance' Weld drops off ticket Bill Clinton: State 'wouldn't do anything they shouldn't do' Clinton ad knocks Trump over immigration MORE Donald Trump Gary Johnson: 'No chance' Weld drops off ticket Clinton ad knocks Trump over immigration Clinton to make case to millennials during Philadelphia speech MORE "No, Bill Weld is in this for the long haul and beyond my wildest dreams Bill Weld is my running mate," ... (more)
Maybe you remember that one from the schoolyard. It was one of those unanswerable taunts - "I'm rubber, you're glue" was another - widely favored by smart-alecky kids, a bit of verbal judo that took an attacker's thrust and turned it back against her.
Trump, in a phone interview Monday with "Fox and Friends," said he has found debate moderator Lester Holt of NBC to be fair, but if he isn't "I have a set of things that I'll be doing." He didn't elaborate.
He's not just validating Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton or holding up his record as a reason for voters to keep the White House in his party's hands. Obama wants his supporters to see anything less than a vote for Clinton as a sign of disrespect to the nation's first black president.
Francis Suarez comes from a long line of civic and political leaders who have formed the Republican bedrock in south Florida's Cuban community for a half-century. Yet the 38-year-old Miami city commissioner hasn't decided whether he will vote for his party's presidential nominee.
Hillary Clinton's campaign is aggressively outworking Donald Trump in battleground Pennsylvania, a state the billionaire businessman can scarcely afford to lose and still hope to become president. Despite polling well in Pennsylvania throughout the summer, Clinton's team is nevertheless bearing down in a state her party has carried in six straight elections.
Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton are particularly loathsome people. But that doesn't mean you can just move to Canada if the one you hate wins in November.
The contrasting styles of Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton are on display each time the two presidential nominees are forced to react to a national security event. Trump is often loose with his language in describing what has taken place, and couples it at times with bragging about his own calls for toughness.