Editor Brian Harrod Provides Comprehensive up-to-date news coverage, with aggregated news from sources all over the world from the Roundup Newswires Network
In this file photo, Hewlett Packard Enterprise President and CEO Meg Whitman is interviewed on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Top Republican donor and fundraiser Whitman is endorsing Democrat Hillary Clinton for president, saying she cannot support a candidate who has “exploited anger, grievance, xenophobia and racial division.” The Hewlett-Packard executive says in a statement Tuesday night that Republican nominee Donald Trump's “demagoguery has undermined the fabric of our national character.” Donald Trump's running mate Mike Pence is breaking with the Republican nominee by endorsing House Speaker Paul Ryan in his primary fight.
Republican U.S. Rep. Charlie Dent of Pennsylvania says he won't be voting for Donald Trump, or Hillary Clinton either. The AP is one of the largest and most trusted sources of independent newsgathering.
The Latest on Democratic Vice Presidential nominee Tim Kaine's campaign events in North Carolina : Democratic vice presidential candidate Tim Kaine says the lifetime knowledge and esteem he and Hillary Clinton share for small businesses is a stark difference between their backgrounds and Donald Trump. Kaine toured a High Point company Wednesday that cuts and sews customized window treatments for motel chains.
Heart-stopping moment America's Got Talent act goes horribly wrong when a female contestant accidentally fires a flaming arrow into her fiance's throat... as he swallows a sword Trump asked a foreign policy adviser three times in ONE HOUR why U.S. doesn't use its nuclear weapons 'Several months ago, a foreign policy expert...went to advise Donald Trump and three times he asked about the use of nuclear weapons' The adviser told him at that Trump at one point asked, 'If we have them, why can we use them?' Former NSA and CIA Director Michael Hayden said on the program that nuclear program was designed for speed, not debate Donald Trump could put the world on the pathway to nuclear annihilation if he becomes president, MSNBC host Joe Scarborough warned this morning.
I believe in our two-party system and respect Republican contributions to our country's greatness. I am a liberal Democrat who listens to MSNBC, FOX News and conservative talk radio.
Woman jogger is murdered in New York: Hunt for killer who 'sexually assaulted and strangled' 30-year-old in broad daylight Did Obama pay a $400m ransom for American prisoners? The US secretly shipped cash to Iran as Americans were released in January - but Obama DENIES it was part of a secret deal for their release Sarah Palin's son-in-law and Medal of Honor recipient Dakota Meyer tells Trump to say sorry to Khan family and 'act like the Commander-in-Chief' The feminine hygiene craze which could be putting YOUR health at risk: Women who douche have 'double the risk of ovarian cancer' Alive! 300 passengers - including six Americans - escape when their Emirates jet crash-lands at Dubai airport after catching fire in the air and EXPLODING on landing Who killed Natalie and Carter? Police desperately seeking clues to find who shot dead two beloved suburban teens to death behind an Atlanta ... (more)
In this March 21, 2016 file photo, then-Democratic National Committee Chair, Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, D-Fla., is interviewed in New York. House Speaker Paul Ryan and Wasserman Schultz are about to test votersa sA A anti-establishment mood, first hand.
The United States should secure its borders through high-tech security, give business a boost by reducing regulations and adopt the tax-overhaul plan proposed by the U.S. House, U.S. Rep. French Hill, R-Ark., said Tuesday. At several points in his speech and during a question-and-answer section, Hill differentiated himself from this year's presidential nominees -- fellow Republican Donald Trump and Democrat Hillary Clinton.
In recent days, Trump has criticized Muslims, babies, firefighters and the military, prompting his wincing Republican backers to issue awkward denunciations Obama turned up the heat on Republicans who appear increasingly ill at ease with Trump but have not withdrawn their endorsement In a searing and virtually unprecedented presidential rebuke, Barack Obama declared embattled Republican White House nominee Donald Trump "unfit" to be president Tuesday and called on party leaders to disown him. Obama piled on as Trump's campaign reeled from multiple self-inflicted scandals, calling the 70-year-old mogul "woefully unprepared" and "unfit to serve as president."
The Republican Party right now is in a war with itself. It has done irreparable damage to itself by nominating and supporting Donald Trump as its nominee for President of the United States.
Some of us are old enough to remember when Labor Day weekend traditionally marked the real start of the presidential campaign season, when everyday voters finally took a closer look at the nominees and their platforms. Now the end-of-summer holiday serves only to remind us that we're entering the final stretch of what has been a bewildering, frustrating and exhausting presidential campaign unlike any in U.S. history.
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump holds a sign during a campaign rally at the BB&T Center, Wednesday, Aug. 10, 2016. Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump attacked each other Wednesday over dueling controversies dogging both candidates -- new Trump comments on gun control that even have shaken up some supporters, and the old Clinton email controversy that her backers wish would go away already.
Noting it for the long-term record: August 1, 2016-four days after the end of the Democratic convention, three days into the Captain Khan disaster , on the same day as the post-convention polls shifted strongly in Hillary Clinton's favor- Donald Trump began emphasizing that the election this fall could well be "rigged." From around time 17:00 onward in the clip below, showing a discussion with the nonpareil Sean Hannity, Trump warns that something fishy is going on.
On Tuesday, retiring New York Rep. Richard Hanna became the first Republican member of Congress to say he will vote for Democrat Hillary Clinton in November instead of Donald Trump. "He is unfit to serve our party and cannot lead this country," Hanna wrote in a column published in The Post-Standard newspaper of Syracuse, New York.
Top Republican donor and fundraiser Meg Whitman is endorsing Democrat Hillary Clinton for president, saying she cannot support a candidate who has "exploited anger, grievance, xenophobia and racial division."
Dozens of people packed the Portage County Democratic Party Headquarters Tuesday afternoon to hear what actor Sean Astin had to say. Astin is best known for his roles in Goonies, Rudy and Lord of the Rings.
None have done so with more impact than Khizr and Ghazala Khan, who dominated the news for much of the past week after denouncing Donald Trump Meg Whitman will support Clinton for president Trump spokeswoman: Khan 'proponent of Sharia Law' Khan slams Trump's Purple Heart comments: 'You did not serve' MORE Hillary Rodham Clinton Meg Whitman will support Clinton for president Trump: Obama probably 'worst president in the history of our country' Grieving families shape '16 debate MORE from the stage of the Republican National Convention in Cleveland. The GOP summit also featured speeches from parents who had a child killed by an illegal immigrant.
A charter bus veered off a central California freeway before dawn Tuesday and struck a pole head-on, killing five people and sending at least five others to hospitals, authorities said. Leonardo Sanchez was sleeping peacefully on a bus carrying him to Oregon to pick blueberries when he was suddenly thrown face first into the back of the seat in front of him, awakening him to a horrific scene of chaos and... Prosecutors have filed three charges of aggravated first-degree murder against a 19-year-old accused of shooting his ex-girlfriend and two young men to death at a party in suburban Seattle over the weekend.
The incumbent President of the United States said today that one of the two possibilities to succeed him is "unfit to serve as president" and is "woefully unprepared" to do the job. You can see Barack Obama's comments starting around time 13:00 in the C-Span clip below , from his press conference this morning with the Prime Minister of Singapore, Lee Hsien Loong.
Hillary Clinton took a break from the presidential campaign on Tuesday to attend the funeral in Rhode Island of her longtime friend, Mark Weiner, a major Democratic donor and fundraiser. Former President Bill Clinton delivered the eulogy, saying he was there to represent the "much despised and maligned political class, those of us who wouldn't have gotten as far in life - and certainly wouldn't have had half as much fun - if it hadn't been for Mark Weiner."