Editor Brian Harrod Provides Comprehensive up-to-date news coverage, with aggregated news from sources all over the world from the Roundup Newswires Network
Signed, sealed, delivered, it's hers! Barack Obama embraces Hillary as he uses his last DNC speech to hammer Trump, declaring 'the American dream is something no wall can ever contain' Bernie Sanders quits the Democratic Party after losing to Hillary Clinton - but still says heads should roll over leaked email scandal 'It's gonna be great - believe me!': Hillary's VP pick and attack dog Tim Kaine repeatedly mocks Trump for his habit of asking voters to trust him 'He has no clue about what makes America great.
If you only read one thing: Good morning from Philadelphia, where there is a new boss of the Democratic Party. The moment the baton was passed was not when President Obama implored his faithful to secure his legacy by voting for Hillary Clinton.
Chelsea Clinton speaks at an event hosted by Glamour and Facebook at the Democratic National Convention on July 26, 2016 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Chelsea Clinton said Thursday that she would consider meeting with Ivanka Trump to discuss the tone of the presidential campaign between their parents Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump.
Sen. Ted Cruz "freaked out" over news reports that Rep. JoaquA n Castro is eyeing a run against him in 2018, the Democrat said Thursday. "He freaked out," Castro told reporters at a Texas delegation breakfast meeting, when asked about a fundraising email Cruz's campaign sent after the Democrat publicly discussed a possible Senate bid .
"I was a big Obama guy in '08 and then was part of the team to try to bring everybody together and get the [Hillary] Clinton supporters on board with the Obama supporters and pull all of us together," the Democratic vice presidential nominee said on ABC News's "Good Morning America." "I actually think where we are now - we're further ahead than we were eight years ago in getting people to unify."
Hillary Rodham Clinton Poll: Voters with higher levels of education favor Clinton Clinton team: Don't let Trump off the hook for Russia remarks House Republicans slam Clinton for past controversies MORE Donald Trump Trump hopes Russia is listening; America, are you listening? Poll: Voters with higher levels of education favor Clinton Clinton team: Don't let Trump off the hook for Russia remarks MORE 's explanation that he was being sarcastic when he called for Russian hackers to break into the former secretary of State's email. Speaking to reporters at a press briefing Thursday, Clinton communications director Jennifer Palmieri said reporters must take Trump's remarks seriously and called for the GOP nominee to be held "accountable."
In advance of Wednesday's packed convention activities - perhaps the most content-heavy convention night I can remember across my four decades watching conventions - the Arkansans delegation spent a little time with Bill Clinton at a reception called "Where It All Began." The name of the party - held at the WHYY-FM public radio building, a snazzy space near Independence Hall - was a double entendre for Philadelphia's role as the birthplace of American democracy and Arkansas's role in fostering Hillary Clinton's public service work.
In the coming weeks and months, we will all be inundated with polls, pundits and speeches telling us one presidential candidate is going to win in November. Be it Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump - no third-party candidate will make even a marginal ripple in the presidential pool party this year - we will have a new president after the polls close on Nov. 8. What does that mean? It means that the decisions of your local school board have a greater affect on you that anything in Washington, D.C. Just look at it this way: school districts around here pass multi-million budgets wherein they spend whatever moneys they have to educate area children.
Donald Trump said he was being "sarcastic" when he said he hopes Russia will find Hillary Clinton's deleted emails from her years as U.S. secretary of state. "Of course I was being sarcastic," the Republican presidential nominee said on Fox News' "Fox & Friends" this morning.
There was not a literal baton, but Barack Obama passed it to Hillary Clinton. The Democratic nominee made a surprise appearance on stage after the president finished addressing the convention Wednesday night.
President Barack Obama speaks during the third day session of the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia, Wednesday, July 27, 2016. . Democratic vice presidential candidate, Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., takes the stage during the third day session of the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia, Wednesday, July 27, 2016.
On one of the biggest nights of the Democratic National Convention, President Barack Obama evoked the words of a Republican hero - former President Ronald Reagan. Obama repeatedly summoned Reagan's hope and optimism Wednesday night as Democrats try to attract disenchanted Republican voters uneasy about Donald Trump's claim to the GOP mantle and fearful about a possible presidency.
In his speech at the Democratic National Convention, President Obama made the case for Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton's election as his successor. Obama said there's never been a man or a woman - "not me, not Bill" - who's more qualified than Hillary Clinton to be president.
Trump tells Fox News Channel in an interview broadcast Thursday that "I guess I take it a little bit personally, but you can't let it get you down." The billionaire real estate mogul was interviewed following a campaign appearance Wednesday evening in Scranton, Pennsylvania.
Last Friday, Tim Kaine's name lit up the news when Hillary Clinton announced him as her choice for vice president. Clinton introduced Kaine as someone with a lifelong commitment to social justice and a progressive who knows how to get things done.
First Lady Michelle Obama's speech on the opening night of the Democratic National Convention rocked, and her words and advice about hate speech resonated especially for many LGBTQ people. In a surprisingly personal speech, Obama shared how she and Barack advise their daughters, Malia and Sasha, on how not to let name-calling, nastiness, and negativity ensnare them by remaining about the fray.
Trump tells Fox News Channel in an interview broadcast Thursday that "I guess I take it a little bit personally, but you can't let it get you down." The billionaire real estate mogul was interviewed following a campaign appearance Wednesday evening in Scranton, Pennsylvania.
It's advice generations of parents have given third-graders before a first performance on a field or in a recital. Hillary Clinton gets some old advice for her historic speech: Be yourself It's advice generations of parents have given third-graders before a first performance on a field or in a recital.
President Barack Obama and Democratic Presidential candidate Hillary Clinton wave together on the third day of the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia , Wednesday, July 27, 2016. The votes have been counted.