Editor Brian Harrod Provides Comprehensive up-to-date news coverage, with aggregated news from sources all over the world from the Roundup Newswires Network
Trump made his tone-deaf appeal during a rally in Dimondale, Michigan, a town with a population that is 93 percent White. "The Donald" also took time to malign Hillary Clinton: "No group in America has been more harmed by Hillary Clinton's policies than African-Americans," he said.
When we asked people which one of five investments they would choose - and provided information about the expected value of each option - 73% said they would choose the option that maximized value. But only 56% said they would donate to the charity that maximized value .
Voters have long seen women as more honest than men. As more women hold high political offices, that dual standard is changing - as the recent legal troubles of female politicians in Pennsylvania and Florida show.
Hillary Clinton will have to answer written questions about her use of a private server for State Department emails in a public records lawsuit brought by Judicial Watch. U.S. District Judge Emmet Sullivan ruled on Friday that Judicial Watch may serve written interrogatories on Clinton, but the group is not entitled to take her deposition, report Bloomberg Politics , the National Law Journal and the New York Times .
Donald Trump called Monday for the shutdown of the Clinton Foundation, saying the nonprofit organization is "the most corrupt enterprise in political history." "It is now clear that the Clinton Foundation is the most corrupt enterprise in political history.
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump finds himself with a slight lead in South Carolina over former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in a new poll. The poll from group Gravis Marketing has the real estate mogul up 46 percent to Clinton's 42 percent in a head to head matchup based on results from Aug. 15 to Aug. 17. The remaining 12 percent of voters find themselves uncertain of either candidate.
Hillary Clinton has not asked Alan Dershowitz to play the role of Trump in her upcoming debate camp. But, as Dershowitz told Politico, he's more than happy to help.
Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton is taking criticism for not having held a news conference in more than eight months. This is Clinton campaign manager Robby Mook yesterday on Robby Mook : "The real question here is whether Secretary Clinton has been taking questions from reporters, which she absolutely has.
Last week, the prices of precious metals continued to drift lower. The volatility that we saw following the Brexit vote declined and gold, silver, platinum and palladium slowly and methodically edged to the downside.
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton leads Republican rival Donald Trump by 8 percentage points among likely voters, according to a Reuters/Ipsos opinion poll released on Friday. The Aug. 14-18 survey showed 42 percent of Americans supported Clinton ahead of the Nov. 8 general election.
Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign will make their final ad reservations for the fall this week, according to an aide, reserving -- in total -- $80 millions in ads through Election Day in eight states. With polls showing Clinton up handily over Donald Trump in the two swing states, Clinton's top aides feel -- citing the growth in minority communities and college-educated white voters -- confident enough to pull local ads in the two states.
The Clinton campaign did not respond to multiple requests for comment. But lobbyists who are part of Clinton's deep network of Washington contacts have raised millions of dollars for her campaign - suggesting that a President Clinton may be more open to appointing lobbyists to positions in her administration.
At a rally here last week, Mike Pence showed the crowd a clip of Gov. Maggie Hassan awkwardly trying to defend Hillary Clinton's honesty. "Gov. Hassan, let me help you out - the answer's no," the Republican vice presidential nominee riffed on Hassan's non-answer to whether Clinton was honest, drawing applause and laughs from the crowd.
Donald Trump "began preparing on Sunday for his first general election debate against Hillary Clinton, with a meeting at his golf club in Bedminster, N.J.," the New York Times reports. "Roger Ailes, the former Fox News chairman who helped prepare George Bush to debate Michael Dukakis in the 1988 presidential race, is advising Mr. Trump as he begins to focus on the debate, scheduled for Sept.
"Hillary Clinton has reserved nearly $80 million in additional television advertising across eight key states in coming months offering both a window into how the Democrat sees the presidential contest shaping up and a reminder of her dominance on the airwaves in the the race against Republican Donald Trump," the Washington Post reports. "The campaign is targeting Florida, Iowa, Nevada, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio and Pennsylvania.
DEMOCRATIC presidential candidate Hillary Clinton has been lampooned on social media as "missing in action", with the hashtag #WheresHillary trending number one globally. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, who visited flood-ravaged Louisiana on Friday to deliver supplies and meet with locals, gave the hashtag a boost over the weekend.
Hillary Clinton said Republicans are taking the presidential campaign "into an alternative universe" as some of her biggest critics try to raise questions about her health. Appearing on "Jimmy Kimmel Live" Monday night, Clinton joked about her health, asking Kimmel to take her pulse while she talked to him.
Donald Trump is pushing hard his outreach to African-American voters in a speech to a predominantly white crowd in Iowa. Speaking Saturday in Des Moines following Sen. Joni Ernst's annual Roast and Ride event, Trump began by noting "there are millions of American-Americans in this country who have succeeded" but stressed that government has failed black communities, with almost 40 percent of African-American children living in poverty.
Democratic mega-donors, including George Soros and Tom Steyer, are putting millions of dollars into efforts to put Hillary Clinton in the White House and win control of the Senate. Their investment comes as Republicans worry about not only the chances of their nominee Donald Trump, but also his effect on down-ballot races.