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Gov. Mike Pence of Indiana, the Republican vice-presidential nominee, spends much of his time on the campaign trail responding to questions about Donald Trump, the party's presidential nominee. A day after Hillary Clinton and her running mate, Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia, released their 2015 tax returns as a way to put pressure on Trump to release his own, Pence was visiting a farmer's market in his hometown, Columbus, Ind., when two reporters asked if the public would get to see the governor's returns.
"God help us," De Niro said on Saturday at the 22nd Sarajevo Film Festival, when asked what he thought of Mr Trump's candidacy. Yet the actor is just one of many to have spoken out after a week in which the Republican candidate's campaign lurched into even more uncharted territory and sought to even question the very legitimacy of the election itself.
Donald Trump lashed out at the New York Times for having become a "newspaper of fiction." In his tweet yesterday, Trump wrote that the "failing" and "dishonest" newspaper cite "non-existent and unnamed sources" in articles about him.
Donald Trump seems determined to turn the race for the presidency into the political equivalent of a professional wrestling match. A spectacle, that is, not a sober campaign for the most powerful post in the world.
For example, in the world of campaign professionals, there's a term for a candidate who spends most of his time complaining about the media: "Loser." Ask Bob Dole.
We are all ethically obligated to look for a way out that builds democratic and inclusive societies and to reject chauvinists like Donald Trump and Vusi Khosa and President Zuma, says the writer. Picture: Eric Thayer We are ethically obligated to say that, yes, black lives matter, poor people's lives matter, women's lives matter, writes Imraan Buccus I have been watching the aftermath of the local government elections from the United States.
There doesn't seem to be an issue that Trump can't handle without hyperbole and exaggeration. But the media pile-on that Trump has experienced over his call for election observers to monitor the polls in Pennsylvania is unfair.
Steve Ferguson, assistant vice president and development officer at First County Bank poses for a portrait at First County Bank's offices in Stamford, Conn. Wednesday, August 10, 2016.
" Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump made an unusual foray Saturday night into deep-blue Connecticut, pledging to make "a big play" for the Democratic stronghold. Connecticut has not voted for a Republican in a presidential election since 1988, when it went for George H.W. Bush, but Trump was undeterred.
US Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump has repeated his attack on President Barack Obama that he helped "found" Islamic State and railed against media reports that his campaign is failing. Speaking for more than an hour in a sweltering room at a campaign rally in Connecticut on Saturday, Trump spent a significant portion of his speech complaining about the media.
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Gunman shoots dead Queens religious leader and his assistant as they leave mosque: Angry crowd gathers at scene to blame Trump Three dead and 1,000 evacuated by army helicopters as three months of rain OVERNIGHT drowns Louisiana - leaving caskets unearthed and snake-filled floodwater - and worse is yet to come Anthony Weiner talks about stripping and calls himself a 'mongoose' in flirty exchange with a man who 'catfished' him pretending to be a female student Fox News host says Hillary Clinton had a SEIZURE on camera in latest claim about her 'secret' health issues - but reporter in the clip says head twitch was 'innocuous' 'The biggest load of bull I've ever heard': Bill Clinton slams FBI director over his testimony about Hillary Clinton's classified emails The Democrats are hacked AGAIN: Private phone number of EVERY House Democrat is posted online by 'Russian' hacker after leak of DNC ... (more)
IF DONALD Trump was trying to scaremonger this past week, then boy did it work. People are growing more and more worried in the US - distrusting, anxious, concerned.
Donald Trump's running mate, Mike Pence, said Saturday he plans to release his tax returns before Election Day, even as the GOP nominee has continued to resist calls to release his own tax returns. "When my tax returns are released, it's going to be a quick read," Pence said Saturday in an interview on WABC Radio, adding that he is also in the process of completing his financial disclosure forms as required under federal law.
The CW Springfield is available over the air and on DirecTV, but they may not be showing up on your channel lineup. Here's how to make it ha E ditor's Note: Media General Washington Bureau Chief Jim Osman on a weekly basis, until the election, will release his "Battle for 270" map predicting the electoral college outcome.
Gunman shoots dead Queens religious leader and his assistant as they leave mosque: Angry crowd gathers at scene to blame Trump Three dead and 1,000 evacuated by army helicopters as three months of rain OVERNIGHT drowns Louisiana - leaving caskets unearthed and snake-filled floodwater - and worse is yet to come Anthony Weiner talks about stripping and calls himself a 'mongoose' in flirty exchange with a man who 'catfished' him pretending to be a female student Fox News host says Hillary Clinton had a SEIZURE on camera in latest claim about her 'secret' health issues - but reporter in the clip says head twitch was 'innocuous' 'The biggest load of bull I've ever heard': Bill Clinton slams FBI director over his testimony about Hillary Clinton's classified emails The Democrats are hacked AGAIN: Private phone number of EVERY House Democrat is posted online by 'Russian' hacker after leak of DNC ... (more)
Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton celebrates on stage as confetti falls during the final day of the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia on July 28. As Hillary Clinton's campaign rolls across the country to town halls and rallies in swing states, the debate about its significance has become as divisive as a two-timing boyfriend in a suburban middle school. For women of a certain age, Clinton's nomination is the triumphant outcome of a movement that began with suffragettes, and continued with feminists who advocated for a woman's right to access contraceptives, go to Harvard or the Air Force Academy, to have equal protection under the law and to get a decent-paying job.
A mishmash of voices and music blaring from video screens compete for attention inside a new art exhibit in Ohio looking at the images and sounds of presidential campaign television ads. In another show near New York City that explores how photos affect voters, snapshots of John Kennedy greeting supporters are mixed with selfies of candidates with celebrities and "regular people."
Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Kaine is urging supporters not to let favorable polling and positive punditry make them complacent on Election Day. Addressing supporters in Manchester, N.H., Saturday, Kaine dedicated much of his message to drawing sharp contrasts between his running mate, Hillary Clinton, and Republican rival Donald Trump.