Editor Brian Harrod Provides Comprehensive up-to-date news coverage, with aggregated news from sources all over the world from the Roundup Newswires Network
Gary Johnson Johnson: 'Dire consequences' for campaign if he misses debates Jill Stein makes New Hampshire ballot Poll: Clinton leads Trump by double digits in NH MORE said on Saturday that there would be "dire consequences" for his campaign if he is not included in the presidential debates. "By dire consequences, I don't think there's any way you can be elected president and not be in the presidential debates," Johnson told the Des Moines Register after a rally in the Iowa capital.
A new national survey shows Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump statistically tied. Clinton leads Trump by 1 percentage point, 44-43, among likely voters in a head-to-head matchup polled by Investors Business Daily.
Libertarian presidential nominee Gary Johnson made a campaign stop in Wisconsin where a new poll shows about three-quarters of state residents don't know enough about him to form an opinion. Johnson thanked the crowd for showing up at Serb Hall in Milwaukee Thursday on a night in which the Green Bay Packers were wrapping up the preseason.
Libertarian presidential candidate Gary Johnson made his first stop of the campaign in Wisconsin Thursday night. Speaking to supporters at MilwaukeeA's Serb Hall, Johnson laid out his vision for an economy driven by choice and proposed a shake-up for federal tax policy.
Hillary Clinton is clinging to just a two-point national lead over Donald Trump, according to a new poll, a far narrower margin than most other surveys show. A Fox News survey published Wednesday shows Clinton winning 41% of the vote to Trump's 39%, with third-party candidates Gary Johnson and Jill Stein earning 9% and 4% respectively.
Former New Mexico governor, Libertarian presidential candidate Gary Johnson, left, stands with his vice presidential running mate, former Massachusetts governor William Weld during a campaign rally Thursday, Aug. 25, 2016, in Concord, N.H. less Former New Mexico governor, Libertarian presidential candidate Gary Johnson, left, stands with his vice presidential running mate, former Massachusetts governor William Weld during a campaign rally Thursday, ... more Several hundred people stand in the rain to hear Former New Mexico governor, Libertarian presidential candidate Gary Johnson speak during a campaign rally Thursday, Aug. 25, 2016, in Concord, N.H. Several hundred people stand in the rain to hear Former New Mexico governor, Libertarian presidential candidate Gary Johnson speak during a campaign rally Thursday, Aug. 25, 2016, in Concord, N.H. Rain falls as former New Mexico Gov. and ... (more)
And now for something completely different in an election season dominated by Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump - a political ad starring "Dead Abe Lincoln" telling voters they "just got screwed" by the two-party system. "What Abe Lincoln prophesied about Trump and Hillary," created on a shoestring budget by viral video mavens the Harmon Brothers, touts Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson in a push to have the former New Mexico governor included in the upcoming presidential debates.
Republican vice presidential candidate, Indiana Gov. Mike Pence, center, talks with Christie Aldana, far left, her daughter Chloe Aldana, and husband Hector Aldana at Millie's Diner in Richmond, Va., Saturday, Aug. 27, 2016. Pence made the unplanned stop during breakfast hours.
Major press coverage of third-party candidates continues, and voters have harkened to alternative voices as the presidential race roars toward its conclusion in November. One forward-thinking journalist in particular was way ahead of the crowd, however.
Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton are neck and neck in North Carolina, a state solidifying its position as a perennial presidential election battleground, while Trump holds a 5-point lead in the traditionally GOP-tilting state of Arizona, according to new CNN/ORC battleground state polls. Trump is the choice of 43% of registered voters in Arizona, while Clinton stands at 38%, followed by Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson at 12% and Green Party nominee Jill Stein at 4%.
Gary Johnson, the Libertarian who has won over some anti-Donald Trump conservatives, will appear on Ohio's presidential election ballot, the state said Wednesday. Johnson, the former governor of New Mexico, will appear on the ballot as an independent candidate.
Ohio's elections chief has cleared the way for Libertarian presidential nominee Gary Johnson to appear on fall ballots in the critical swing state. Johnson's ballot access had been in question after party activists submitted paperwork and voter signatures earlier this month on behalf of a different candidate.
Trump can squeeze in two or three new scandals a week, but HIllary's damn email thing has lasted longer than 31 presidential administrations. For the Record: Slowest-moving scandal ever Trump can squeeze in two or three new scandals a week, but HIllary's damn email thing has lasted longer than 31 presidential administrations.
Donald Trump leads Hillary Clinton by one point in Missouri, a state that has voted Republican in the last four presidential elections, according to a Monmouth University poll released Tuesday . Mr. Trump had a 44 percent to 43 percent lead over Mrs. Clinton in the poll, with Libertarian Party presidential nominee Gary Johnson at 8 percent and 6 percent either undecided or opting for another candidate.
Hillary Clinton has a big lead over Donald Trump in Virginia, according to a new poll released Tuesday, which shows the Democratic nominee with a 16-point advantage in the state. The Roanoke College poll found Clinton leading Trump 48% to 32% among likely Virginia voters in a four-way race.
Via Red State , I'm skeptical. There may not be a majority out there of movement conservatives or nationalists or evangelicals or libertarians, but there may be a majority between them of anti-leftists.
But he said voters who want to tackle climate change should vote for Clinton, not Green Party candidate Jill Stein or anyone else. "I particularly urge anyone who is concerned about the climate crisis, sees it as the kind of priority that I see it as, to look at the sharp contrast between the solar plan that Secretary Clinton has put forward, and her stated commitment to support the Clean Power Plan, and the contrast between what she has said and is proposing with the statements of the Republican nominee, which give me great concern," Gore told ThinkProgress.
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump finds himself with a slight lead in South Carolina over former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in a new poll. The poll from group Gravis Marketing has the real estate mogul up 46 percent to Clinton's 42 percent in a head to head matchup based on results from Aug. 15 to Aug. 17. The remaining 12 percent of voters find themselves uncertain of either candidate.