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Kellyanne Conway, left, campaign manager for Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, attends his Hispanic advisory roundtable meeting in New York, Saturday, Aug. 20, 2016. A right is Rick Figueroa, first vice president for FINC Firm of Houston.
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has created quite a stir this week with his odd show of outreach to black voters , and on Sunday morning, freshly-minted Trump campaign manager Kellyanne Conway picked an odd way to defend Trump's comments. This Week host George Stephanopoulos told Conway that many were offended by Trump's generalizations about poverty in the African-American community, and Conway responded by pointing out that she lives in a white community, and found the remarks quite compelling: STEPHANOPOULOS: As you know - you were just talking about that.
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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. One of Clinton's biggest accomplishments listed on her campaign Web site is her support for the UN women's conference in Bejing in 1995, when she famously declared, "Women's rights are human rights."
Flying across the Pacific on an Air Force jet bound for Beijing, first lady Hillary Clinton huddled deep into the night with a few aides and advisers, honing her speech for the UN Fourth World Conference on Women. It was 1995, and it had been a bruising first few years in the White House: Troopergate, Travelgate, Whitewater.
Donald Trump sat down Saturday with Latino leaders from nearly a dozen states in his latest effort to appeal to minority voters who have largely spurned his struggling presidential campaign. After waging a yearlong campaign marked by divisive and racially tinged rhetoric, the Republican nominee also reached out to African Americans several times in recent days.
Donald Trump, US Republican presidential candidate, claims in his new tweet that he has evidence that CIA officers helped in Turkey's attempted coup. It is probably make a new turmoil amid the heated presidential race between him and the Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton.
Donald Trump doubled his campaign expenses last month, yet was still spending at a far slower clip than Hillary Clinton. New finance documents show the Republican presidential nominee's campaign spent about $18.5 million in July.
Trump outlines his 'reform agenda' at Virginia rally The GOP candidate wrapped up a week that included overhauling his campaign staff. Check out this story on AlamogordoNews.com: http://usat.ly/2bKUks9 Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump greets the crowd as he arrives to speak at a campaign rally in Fredericksburg, Va., Saturday, Aug. 20, 2016.
The Republican presidential candidate raised $36.6 million in July, according to newly released filings to the Federal Election Committee. But that is $16 million less than his Democratic challenger for the month.
Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton may well be the best things that have happened to a free press in a long time. "Best" not in terms of ratings, circulation, advertising or such, though some media will see a temporary bump up.
The actor-activist says he won't host the event at his L.A. home due to a scheduling conflict and Justin Timberlake and Jessica Biel have stepped in as hosts. The Clinton campaign denies the decision is connected to questions DiCaprio and his foundation are facing over ties to a $3 billion embezzlement scheme.
Seeking to reboot his flagging presidential bid, Donald Trump has made a strong pitch to African-American voters, saying he wants the Republican party to become their home once again as it used to be in the Abraham Lincoln-era. "The GOP is the Party of Lincoln and I want our party to be the home of the African-American vote once again.
Paddy Power have markets up on whether Trump or Clinton won't be their party's Presidential candidate on election day. After all there has been speculation about Trump quitting the race But if for whatever reason Trump isn't the candidate on 9/11/2016 if you wanted to bet on this market, the better strategy might be to back the likely replacements for Trump.
"The super PAC backing Democrat Hillary Clinton vastly outraised the outside groups supporting Republican Donald Trump in July," the Wall Street Journal reports. "The pro-Clinton group, Priorities USA Action, raised $9.9 million last month, less than the $12 million it raised in June, and ended July with more than $38 million in the bank.
Former Breitbart spokesman Kurt Bardella is doubling down on the slams against his old boss while announcing that he will vote for Hillary Clinton as a lifelong Republican. Bardella raked Stephen Bannon across the coals earlier this week when he described how the Trump campaign's new CEO used to run business meetings like " white supremacist rallies ."
But in the same speech here, he again slammed an order by the state's Democratic governor, Terry McAuliffe, to restore voting rights to some convicted felons who have completed their sentences, a move McAuliffe says could help African-Americans who were disproportionally affected by laws that put lifetime bans on felons. "The GOP is the party of Abraham Lincoln," Trump said.
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton speaks to media as she meets with law enforcement leaders at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York Aug. 18. - Associated Press DES MOINES, Iowa – It's no day at the beach, but Hillary Clinton is having the political equivalent of a quiet August.
Hillary Clinton outspends Trump in White House showdown Wealthy Democrats help Clinton retain edge on Republican rival, filings show. Check out this story on USATODAY.com: http://usat.ly/2bLlH5f WASHINGTON - Democrat Hillary Clinton and Republican Donald Trump each raced to their strongest fundraising month of the campaign in July, but Clinton and her allies continue to outmuscle her GOP rival in the air and ground war for the presidency, according to new details of the candidates' spending.
Hillary Clinton is seizing on Donald Trump's recent comments that he "regrets" some things he's said in the course of his presidential campaign. Clinton seizes on Trump 'regrets' in new video Hillary Clinton is seizing on Donald Trump's recent comments that he "regrets" some things he's said in the course of his presidential campaign.