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It is unbelievable the throngs of Americans that support the campaign of Donald Trump. The man who has bragged about abuse of women, the man who has left an amazing array of contractors and employees in the financial dust, the man who all of a sudden thinks the election is rigged despite its being disproved time and again, the man who calls people liars when confronted with facts, the man who wants the Democratic nominee to take a drug test before the last debate ... on and on.
On the first anniversary of the start of his presidential campaign, Donald Trump spent much of the day in a setting he knows well - a room full of high-priced lawyers battling out a civil lawsuit. Trump paused his campaigning June 16 to answer questions under oath in one of his lawsuits against two celebrity chefs.
Pursuant to their shared goal of advancing civil space cooperation, as agreed upon in the Strategic Track of the U.S. - China Strategic and Economic Dialogue in June 2015 and reaffirmed in June 2016, the United States and China convened their second Civil Space Dialogue on October 20, 2016, in Washington, DC. This ongoing Civil Space Dialogue enhances cooperation between the two countries, promotes responsible behavior in space, and encourages greater transparency and openness on a variety of space-related issues.
No matter who wins the presidency on Nov. 8, one result is already clear: The job of first lady, as Americans have known it for a half-century, will drastically change. We've heard a lot about what Bill Clinton might do with the title of "First Gentleman," but little speculation about Melania Trump as first lady.
As an aspiring politician who's considering a run against Senator Elizabeth Warren, he's strictly minor league. Warren could easily smash out of the ballpark whatever Schilling throws at her.
As the final presidential debate lingers like a Halloween pinata full of October surprises, voters may be less committed to one or the other candidate than the numbers suggest. Lest you suddenly seek the highest perch from which to hurl yourself, this is strictly my personal unscientific prediction, based on instinct, experience and conversations with hundreds of voters across the country.
He could never be the self-made man his father, Fred Trump, was. Manhattan elites would never really respect the guy from Queens, let alone treat him as one of their own.
The Trump campaign has announced that the candidate will deliver a major speech in historic Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, on Saturday, October 22. He will present his closing arguments for American voters, outlining the steps he will take in his first 100 days to make America great again. For all his gaffes and misstatements, the fact is this: The race is not over until it's over.
Pundits long have said Hillary Clinton is a terrible candidate. You have to go back to Al Gore in 2000 to find a politician who faced as much jeering from the media, over everything from claims of dishonesty to matters of personal style.
The case against Hillary Clinton could have been written before the recent WikiLeaks and FBI disclosures. But these documents do provide hard textual backup.
I live in Trump Country, in Western Pennsylvania about an hour east of Pittsburgh. Last Saturday morning, as I drove 40 minutes over the mountain to swim at the YMCA, I passed Trump signs the whole way.
Americans face daunting challenges beyond the apparent grasp of the principal contenders for president. Rekindling growth and creating enough good-paying jobs will require wholly rethinking how we educate and socialize young people for work.
Ia Swould like to personally thank Congressman Tom Rice for his immediate response to the problems and heartache affecting the citizens of Horry County. He answers his phone, he is responsive, he cares and I have seen him moved to tears.
In this Nov. 24, 2000 file photo, Broward County canvassing board member Judge Robert Rosenberg uses a magnifying glass to examine a disputed ballot at the Broward County Courthouse in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Donald Trump, who's railed for months about a "rigged" political system, used the final presidential debate to defiantly say he won't decide until the election ends whether he will accept its results.
So Donald Trump wouldn't accept Barack Obama as a legal American, and won't accept Hillary Clinton as president, or even another Ruth Bader Ginsburg as judge. "Whether he accepts the outcome [of the election] - that's a red herring," Perry said Wednesday after Trump's aggressive but sometimes sour performance in the third and final presidential debate.
I can't help but wonder why life is so full of changes, from the moment of our birth to the day of our death. Nothing ever stays the same, but there are times when I wish it would.
If you watched the presidential debate last week, the only real winner was the guy who wore the red sweater and asked an intelligent policy question about energy. His Izod sweater has become a hot clothing item at stores all over America.
Even by the standards of liberal Democrats, Hillary Clinton is running the most frankly redistributionist presidential campaign in years. She promises massive new spending initiatives and balanced budgets, achieved by raising taxes on higher-income Americans in ways that other Democrats have rejected in the recent past.
According to an FBI investigative file released Monday, a high-ranking State Department official offered the agency a deal last year aimed at lowering the classification level of an email on Hillary Clinton's private server. An FBI official said State Department Undersecretary of Management Patrick F. Kennedy suggested that in return for rebranding an email as unclassified, "State would reciprocate by allowing the FBI to place more agents in countries where they are presently forbidden," including Iraq.