Editor Brian Harrod Provides Comprehensive up-to-date news coverage, with aggregated news from sources all over the world from the Roundup Newswires Network
John Oliver's main story this week was about charter schools. But the Last Week Tonight host could not leave the HBO airwaves for a month-long hiatus before at least touching on the "racist voodoo doll made of discarded cat hair" also known as Donald Trump.
Usually, candidates say which former presidents they'd seek to emulate. But Donald Trump has no sense of history-while Hillary Clinton has too much of her own.
Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton held a fundraiser in Provincetown, Massachusetts Sunday afternoon attended by a reported 1000 supporters that featured celebrities Cher and Billie Jean King as well as current and former elected officials including Sen. Ed Markey and former Rep. Barney Frank. The event was held at the Pilgrim Monument and Provincetown Museum.
A CBS News focus group discussion with people who once supported Republican nominee Donald Trump but now have serious doubts about that decision articulated the problems many are having with the candidate. When asked why Trump has lost their support, one participant said that "When he initially began to run, he gave voice to a lot of the frustrations that I was feeling about how government is working or more to the point not working.
Huma Abedin worked at a radical Muslim journal for 10 years - Huma Abedin, longtime aide to former US Secretary of State and Democratic presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton, - MORE FROM: - Hillary Clinton's top campaign aide, and the woman who might be the future White House chief
Days after the Clinton Foundation said it would stop accepting donations from corporations and foreign entities if Hillary Clinton becomes president, her campaign manager defended the organization's fundraising after criticism from Republicans and some Democrats. "Over 10 million people around the world get important AIDS medication, life-saving AIDS and HIV medication, because of the foundation," Robby Mook said Sunday on CNN's "State of the Union."
It's only August, but if there's a conclusion that can be drawn already about the November elections it's that the voters seem in no mood to grant either Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton a landslide. The partisans are too evenly matched, and nobody's in love with either Democrat or Republican.
Resentment of open-door immigration is growing across the Western nations, and Hillary Clinton will get no tips, hints or reassurance from Angela Merkel . The German chancellor has unique immigration headaches, and they arrived through an open door much like the one that Barack Obama wants to leave as his legacy and that Hillary promises to keep if she returns to the White House, this time as the president.
Author Paul Sperry dives into the Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs, where Huma Abedin worked as an editor for ten years. Hillary Clinton's top campaign aide, and the woman who might be the future White House chief of staff to the first female US president, for a decade edited a radical Muslim publication that opposed women's rights and blamed the US for 9/11.
Today, Hillary Clinton's only public event is a fundraiser with Cher in Massachusetts. The Clinton Campaign added an "organizing event" in Reno, NV on August 25th to her paltry schedule .
Donald Trump addressed a crowd of more than 3,000 people at the Fredericksburg Expo and Conference Center in Virginia on Saturday evening. Prior to Trump's address, Breitbart News caught up with many rally attendees - which included women, veterans, black Americans, Hispanic Americans, immigrants, seniors and millennials - and asked why they are supporting Trump.
The U.S. presidential election is looming large in the Canadian government's summer retreat, with U.S. trade ties among the discussion points for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his cabinet. Trudeau and his ministers are holding a quarterly retreat in Sudbury, Ontario, on Sunday and Monday.
Newsweek reporter Kurt Eichenwald spoke with MSNBC's Joy Reid on Sunday morning on the topic of conspiracy theories that Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton is gravely ill and too sick to serve as president of the United States. Eichenwald slammed Fox News host Sean Hannity and former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani as "amoral sociopaths" for their dogged refusal to give up on trying to diagnose Clinton via videotape and thereby diminish her in the eyes of the voting public.
Hillary Clinton "owes the state of North Carolina a very big apology," Donald Trump thundered, condemning the loss of manufacturing jobs due to free-trade deals supported by the Democratic presidential nominee. In the state that may be the most pivotal to Trump's White House bid, the audience for the Republican's chief economic pitch is shrinking by the day.
Hillary Clinton's campaign is halfway to its goal of raising a billion dollars for the 2016 race, according to her finance director. Dennis Cheng announced the achievement on Thursday in a meeting with staff at the campaign's headquarters in Brooklyn, New York, according to a campaign aide who was present for the meeting but wasn't authorized to discuss internal campaign strategy and spoke on condition of anonymity.
Senior GOP officials and aides to Donald Trump said Sunday that they are working to repair months of discord between the campaign and the Republican National Committee as they prepare for the fall race. They said the campaign would bring a senior GOP strategist into Trump's New York headquarters several days a week, and the RNC would increase sharing of political data and fundraising strategies.
Republican Sen. Johnny Isakson insists he won't be a "volunteer apologist" for Donald Trump or anyone else who utters something stupid, but that defiant independence is being sorely tested by the GOP presidential nominee's sinking support and Democrat Hillary Clinton's push into surprisingly competitive Georgia. The down-ballot Senate race involving the affable, two-term Isakson wasn't ranked as poachable for Democrats despite the changing demographics in the southern state and the higher, diverse turnout of a presidential election year.
Former Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley on Sunday said that Donald Trump's attempt to rally black voters and make the GOP the "party of Lincoln once more" probably has the 16th president rolling in his grave. Mr. Trump, the Republican presidential nominee, recently asked black voters in Michigan whether they had anything to lose by bucking their historical support for the Democratic Party.
Foreign donations to the Clinton Foundation will take time to wind down, Hillary Clinton's campaign manager said Sunday when asked about its plan to forgo that money if she's elected president. Mook sought to defend the decision by the Clinton Foundation to separate itself from foreign money, but not before the election is decided.