Tag: Donald Trump

  • Election: Clinton, Trump in marathon race for last-hour campaigns

    Election: Clinton, Trump in marathon race for last-hour campaigns

    With the election day looming on Tuesday, the U.S. leading presidential candidates Democratic Hillary Clinton and Republican Donald Trump engage in a marathon race over the weekend in the final battle for the White House.

    The campaigns by both Clinton and Trump have become very frantic with Clinton and Trump crisscrossing the country’s battleground states that are seen critical to cause an electoral upset.

    The electioneering witnessed exceptional rancour through of the last several months of Clinton’s contest with Trump while her email scandal has seen her early two-digit lead tightened to the Election Day.

    Trump had five campaign stops in five states on Sunday and had been to more than a dozen states since Friday as he made frantic efforts to flip Democratic states as he battled Clinton for the White House.

    With the entire 18-month race boiling down to the last two days, Trump covered nearly 4,800 kilometres on Sunday as he hovered around the battleground states of Colorado, Iowa, Minnesota, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Virginia and Florida.

    Of those battleground states, however, only Iowa is currently leaning Republican, but Trump is making a last-hour effort for the Democratic territory to score a historic upset.

    The Republican nominee also stayed on point in his message at each rally on Sunday that “it’s now or never to reject America’s corrupt establishment.”

    “This is a marathon today. We’ll call this the midnight special speech. You have to get everyone you know to the polls.

    “We are going to have one of the great victories of all time. This is going to be Brexit times 50,’’ Trump said.

    Trump also warned about a Somalis immigrant population, who had left their war-ravaged country and settled in large numbers around Minneapolis in Minnesota.

    “You don’t even have the right to talk about it. You don’t even know who’s coming in. Clinton’s plan will import generations of terrorism,” Trump warned.

    Clinton began her day Sunday by campaigning in Philadelphia after attending a get-out-the-vote concert in the city on Saturday night.

    She will also return to the state for two rallies on Monday, a sign that the state is among the battlegrounds where her lead over Trump has dwindled in recent days.

    Clinton campaigned in Pennsylvania, Ohio and New Hampshire with musical, sports and political celebrities including Beyoncé, Jay-Z, and LeBron James, aimed at appealing to young voters and minorities.

    She is also using the closing days of the race to try to shore up support in battleground states like Michigan and Ohio where she has been leading and tip the balance in other swing states.

    The Democratic nominee currently has a lead in the national polls and has several more paths available to win in the Electoral College on Tuesday.

    She also stayed on point in the rallies to argue that Trump has a “dark and divisive” vision of the country and that she is offering something more hopeful.

    “I want an America where everyone has a place, where everyone is included and I know there is a lot of frustration, even anger, in this election season.

    “I see it, I hear it, you know, I’m a subject of it. I get it. But anger is not a plan. Anger is not going to get us new jobs,’’ she appealed to voters in her “get-out-the-vote” message.

    Sunday’s rally event was Clinton’s last scheduled visit to Ohio, where she trailed despite the heavy emphasis on turning out black voters in Cleveland.

    Clinton was scheduled to cap her day Sunday with an appearance in Manchester, New Hampshire, where folk star James Taylor was warming up the crowd.

    Both Clinton and Trump also scrambled to gain an advantage in some newly competitive battleground states as well as lock down others where they have held leads.

    In an attempt to garner the 270 electoral votes needed to win, Trump pounced on new targets in his sights in historically Democratic states including Michigan, Minnesota and New Mexico.

    Michigan, once thought to be safe for Democrats, has become a last-minute battleground with Clinton heading to there on Monday.

    Former president Bill Clinton made a stop in Michigan town of Lansing on Sunday after visiting churches in Flint, another Michigan town.

    Clinton also deployed a full slate of high-level surrogates around the country on Sunday, including President Barack Obama, who appeared in Florida town of Kissimmee.

    Obama urged Hillary Clinton’s supporters in this critical battleground state to cast votes and “help finish what we started eight years ago”.

    “Now here’s the thing, though, Florida: All the progress we’ve made goes out the window if we don’t win this election and we win this election if we win Florida”.

    “If we win Florida, it’s a wrap. We win Florida, it’s over. So we’ve got to work our hearts out these next two days as if our future depends on it.

    Obama cited his economic accomplishments in office, praised Clinton’s work ethic by calling her “the Energizer bunny;” and urged the electorates to vote for Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Patrick Murphy.

    “You can’t stick her with a Republican Congress that behaves the way they’ve been behaving with me.”

    Obama also denounced Republican candidate Donald Trump on multiple fronts, saying “our democracy is on the ballot” and Trump’s character makes him uniquely unqualified to serve as commander-in-chief.

    “Now, if somebody can’t handle a Twitter account, they can’t handle the nuclear codes,’’ Obama said.

    Clinton campaign said on Sunday that the race was effectively over and that the campaign believed the Democratic nominee would hold on to Minnesota, Michigan and Wisconsin.

    Clinton’s campaign announced that rock star Bruce Springsteen would join her at a Philadelphia rally that would also include Obama and first lady Michelle Obama.

    Obama will also campaign in the Michigan state’s city of Ann Arbor on Monday.

    “We think we have this race over. This week, we’re going to get over our 270 electoral votes,” Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta said on Sunday.

    As the campaign closes on Monday, nationally, the ABC/Washington Post tracking poll shows Clinton ahead by five points, with 48 percent to Trump’s 43 per cent.

    The final NBC/Wall St. Journal poll also showed Clinton ahead by four points, with 44 percent to Trump’s 40 per cent.

    A final poll by Morning Consult for Politico found Clinton leading by 45 per cent to Trump’s 42 per cent nationally.

    However, the USC/L.A. Times “Daybreak” tracking poll, which consistently has shown a stronger result for Trump than any other major survey, showed him with a five-point lead of 48 per cent and to Clinton’s 43 per cent.

    Meanwhile, the Clinton campaign continues to use its huge financial advantage over Trump to press its case to swing voters on the airwaves.

    The campaign on Sunday released two national ads appealing to moderate and Republican voters to reject Trump and embrace Clinton.

    Both ads feature straight-to-camera testimonials from Republican military veterans who say they cannot vote for their party’s nominee, citing Trump’s comments about women.

    Another two-minute ad was set to air Monday night, aimed at reaching about 20 million people, according to a campaign aide.

    Trump also released a closing campaign ad, a two-minute spot tying Clinton to the “failed and corrupt political establishment” and “global special interests.”

    The ad, which features images of piles of cash along with Jewish corporate and financial leaders, including Goldman Sachs Lloyd Blankfein and Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen, was sharply criticised by the Anti-Defamation League for anti-Semitic overtones.

    With the announcement on Sunday by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) clearing Clinton over email scandal that plummets her ratings and tightened her lead over Trump, Clinton’s campaign has maintained a more optimistic look at her victory.

  • Infographics: How Clinton fares against Trump

    Infographics: How Clinton fares against Trump

    Less than a week until the United States of America (USA)’s presidential election scheduled for Tuesday, November 8, 2016, which will be the 58th quadrennial U.S. presidential election.

    Amidst several criticisms and revelations that have graced the campaigns, Hillary Clinton‘s once commanding national lead has slipped to less than 3 points over the weekend.

    Although Donald Trump is still far behind in the electoral count, his chances have vastly improved over the last week.

    According to DailyWire, after suffering a bloody October where all of the business mogul’s positive momentum from September was undone, he has begun to climb again in the national polls, while Clinton falters following a series of damaging headlines — most notably the reopening of the FBI’s investigation into her private email server.

    Though Trump still trails in most of the battleground states — including North Carolina, Nevada, Arizona, and Colorado — he has closed the gap in many and regained the edge in the crucial swing states of Ohio and Florida, only narrowly anyway.

    Below are the most recent polling numbers for the three traditional key swing states as reported by DailyWire:

    FLORIDA

    In Florida, as of Oct. 30, RCP’s poll average finds Trump back in the lead, though by a minuscule margin. In a four-way contest, Trump holds a razor-thin 0.5% lead (44.8 – 44.3). The results of the two-way polls show the same gap: 0.5% (45.7 – 45.2). The two candidates were tied in late September. Clinton led the state by over 4% in mid-August and over 2% in mid-October.

    OHIO

    In Ohio, as of Oct. 30, Trump maintains a narrow lead over Clinton. In a four-way race, Trump leads by 1.3% (45.8 – 44.5) and by a 1.5-point margin in the head-to-head surveys (46.5 – 45). Trump held an over 3-point lead in the first week of October, while Clinton led by 5 points in late August.

    PENNSYLVANIA

    In Pennsylvania, as of Oct. 30, Clinton holds a 5.2-point lead in a four-way contest (46.5 – 41.3), a 3-point slip from a month ago. Head-to-head surveys show her with a similar advantage: 5% (46.7 – 41.7). In mid-October, Clinton held an over 9-point lead.

  • Trump cries foul as FBI clears Clinton

    Trump cries foul as FBI clears Clinton

    Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump has said that the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) could not review 650,000 new emails belonging to Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton in eight days.

    Trump, at a rally in Detroit hours after the FBI affirmed that Clinton would not be prosecuted for her private email server, said the FBI knew that Clinton was guilty of a crime.

    He expressed doubt on the thoroughness of the FBI’s review of the emails that Clinton’s aide Huma Abedin kept on a computer belonging to her estranged husband, Anthony Weiner.

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    “You can’t review 650,000 new emails in eight days; you can’t do it, folks. Hillary Clinton is guilty.

    “She knows it. The FBI knows it. The people know it. And now, it’s up to the American people to deliver justice at the ballot box on November 8,” he said.

    The Republican candidate knocked Clinton for using a private email system when she was Secretary of State.

    Michigan was the third of five states where Trump was campaigning on Sunday.

    “We’re going to stop the jobs from going to Mexico and China and all over the world.

    “We’re going to make Michigan into the manufacturing hub of the world once again and no politician will do that. They don’t have a clue,” Trump told the crowd.

    The Republican candidate criticised Ford, Chrysler and other companies for their manufacturing in Mexico and other countries.

    “It’s not going to happen if I’m president, believe me,” Trump said.

    Trump also promised to end the “nightmare of violence” caused by illegal immigrants in the country.

    The FBI Director, James Comey, had told lawmakers on Sunday that the agency had not changed its opinion that Clinton should not face criminal charges after a review of new emails.

    The implication of the FBI’s conclusion is that the Democratic candidate will not be charged with anything stemming from her private email server.

    “I write to supplement my October 28, 2016 letter that notified you the FBI would be taking additional investigative steps with respect to former Secretary of State Clinton’s use of a personal email server.

    “Since my letter, the FBI investigative team has been working around the clock to process and review a large volume of emails from a device obtained in connection with an unrelated criminal investigation.

    “During that process, we reviewed all of the communications that were to or from Hillary Clinton while she was Secretary of State.

    “Based on our review, we have not changed our conclusions that we expressed in July with respect to Secretary Clinton.’

    “I am very grateful to the professionals at the FBI for doing an extraordinary amount of high-quality work in a short period of time,” Comey said in a letter to the Congress personally signed by him.

    Recall that Comey had recently informed Congress that the FBI had discovered emails in its separate investigation of Anthony Weiner.

    Weiner is the estranged husband of top Clinton aide, Huma Abedin.

    The FBI said at that time that the emails could be connected to its investigation of whether Clinton mishandled classified information by using a private email server.

    However, Trump still took to the stage in Minneapolis for a rally minutes after the news broke, and addressed the crowd without knowing Clinton had been cleared again.

    Trump has used the re-opening of the email probe to score campaign points, which also affected Clinton’s polls rating, tightening her two-digit lead over Trump to a neck-and-neck.

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  • U.S. election: Clinton leads Trump in Sunday polls

    U.S. election: Clinton leads Trump in Sunday polls

    Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton holds a modest lead over Republican Donald Trump in the latest Washington Post-ABC Tracking Poll released on Sunday.

    In a Post-ABC poll released two days before, Clinton had led Trump by 47 per cent to 44 per cent.

    Clinton had an advantage in affirmative support, the poll said, with 55 per cent of backers saying they are mainly supporting her, compared with 43 per cent of Trump voters.

    More Trump voters say they “mainly oppose Clinton”.

    As early voting winds down, a spike in Latino turnout across the country appears to be giving Clinton an edge in battleground states.

    The final polls are trickling in and Clinton is retaining a modest lead nationally.

    Similarly, 44 per cent of likely voters support Clinton and 40 per cent back Trump, according to a new NBC News/WSJ national poll released on Sunday.

    Clinton holds big leads with women and minority voters, while men, white voters and senior citizens buttress Trump’s support.

    The Democratic candidate is also doing better with those who have already cast their ballots, but the Republican candidate holds a lead among voters who plan to do so on election day.

    Americans will vote for a new president on Tuesday but about 37 million voters have already chosen who they want to rule the country in early voting.

    The new poll came alongside a brief moment of drama in the final days of campaigning

    A correspondent of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in the U.S. reports that both Clinton and Trump have concentrated their attention to battleground states that are the determinants of who wins the election.

    States like Arizona, Florida, North Carolina, Ohio and Virginia have the power to swing the election but so far, neither Trump nor Clinton has a significant lead in these crucial states.

    Florida has 29 Electoral College and if Clinton wins, Trump would have to win almost all every other swing state to be elected president.

    Ohio has 18 Electoral College votes and Trump needs to win Ohio if he is to have any chance.

    North Carolina has 15 and Obama won the state in 2008 but lost to Republican in 2012, but polls are split on how the state would fall.

    Virginia has 13 Electoral College votes and it had voted 10 consecutive Republican presidents before Obama won it in 2008 and 2012, but polls show that it is leaning towards Clinton.

    Arizona has 11 Electoral College votes and Trump needs to win it if he is to claim the White House.

    Currently, Clinton’s electoral vote total is at 268 when all the states that are solidly or leaning in her direction are added up against Trump’s 204.

    That leaves six remaining battleground contests worth a total of 66 electoral votes in Arizona, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, North Carolina, and the second congressional district in and around Omaha, Nebraska.

  • ‘I’ll no longer defend Trump’

    ‘I’ll no longer defend Trump’

     Speaker of the Unite States House of Representatives Paul Ryan (Republican) On Monday said that he would no longer defend presidential candidate Donald Trump, U.S. media reported.

    In a conference call on Monday with Republican lawmakers, Ryan said that he had no plan of campaigning with Trump before Election Day on November 8, this year, even as reports reveal that the speaker is currently the most powerful Republican.

    Ryan said that Republican Congress was needed to keep Hillary Clinton, the Democratic presidential candidate, in check if she wins.

    The speaker had initially hesitated to back Trump’s presidential bid but decided to endorse him in June.

    However, Ryan did not revoke his endorsement of Trump during his conference call.

    Trump came under pressure to withdraw from the race on Saturday after explicit comments he made about groping women in a 2005 conversation were leaked to the media.

    The Republican candidate was not invited to an event in Wisconsin in which he was billed to be the guest of honour alongside Ryan.

    Ryan appeared at the event and referred to the firestorm over Trump’s comments as the “elephant in the room,’’ saying he was “sickened’’ by Trump’s vulgar comments.

  • Trump apologises for remarks on women

    United States presidential candidate, Donald Trump, has apologised for obscene comments about women he made in a newly released videotape from 2005.

    Mr Trump said that “these words don’t reflect who I am, I apologise.”

    In the video, Mr. Trump said “you can do anything” to women “when you’re a star” and brags about trying to grope and kiss women.

    The BBC reports that top Republicans condemned the comments.

    His election rival Hillary Clinton called them “horrific.”

    “We cannot allow this man to become president,” she posted on Twitter.

    Mr. Trump’s 90-second statement on Saturday morning appeared to be his first full apology in a campaign laced with controversial remarks.

  • Trump’s rhetoric tears young Republicans apart

    • GOP candidate may lose student-republicans’ votes
    Despite their aversion to the utterances and campaign tone of Mr. Donald Trump, several college republicans have endorsed the candidature of the Grand Old Party (GOP). But, Trump endorsement by the college republican groups does not have binding effect on the liberty of individual students to vote for their candidates of choice among the four contenders for the Oval Office.
    Mr. Trump’s popularity among millennial voters is declining, because the youth feel his conducts and campaign language are not presidential and disrespect the cherished American diversity as preached by the country’s founding fathers.
    Before he won his party nomination, the Republican Party candidate riled African-Americans, Hispanics and Muslims with unprintable expletives, threatening to deport Muslims and Latinos and shut American borders against them. Many college Republicans endured taunts from independent millennials over Mr. Trump’s hateful rhetoric, but none of them has found the courage to openly defend the GOP candidate’s hate speeches.
    Trump’s endorsement came in the wake of many College Republican chapters in various esteemed universities, including Princeton University, University of Pennsylvania, and Harvard University, opting not to endorse the GOP presidential nominee—and even going so far as to endorse Libertarian presidential candidate, Gary Johnson, as was done at Cornell University in New York, Mr. Trump’s homestead.
    It was not all smooth sail for Mr. Trump to win the support of college republicans across universities. It was tie votes across colleges when Trump’s endorsement was discussed among young Republicans.
    At the University of Virginia (UVA), a motion to endorse Trump almost tore apart the chapter’s young Republicans, majority of whom criticised the GOP candidate’s spiteful remarks against the fallen Muslim-American soldier, Captain Humayun Khan.
    The late Capt Khan, a UVA alumnus, was killed by a suicide bomber in Iraq while serving in the U.S. Army. The UVA Republican chapter voted 67-63 to endorse Trump. The tie outcome showed deep resentment for Trump’s candidature among the college Republicans.
    At the University of Michigan, Trump’s official endorsement was forced on college Republicans, some of whom vowed to cast their ballots for the Libertarian Party’s candidate, Gary Johnson.
    President of Young Republicans at the University Michigan, told members: “The College Republicans at the University of Michigan will officially be endorsing the Trump-Pence campaign for this election. I know that some you may not agree with all of Mr. Trump’s statements and policies, but the campaign is not about one person. Mr. Trump in the White House comes with an entire administration of conservatives that, as Republicans, share many of the same ideals that we would not see represented under Clinton’s presidency.
    “And any vote not for Trump is a vote for Clinton. But regardless of your views on Mr. Trump, I encourage you all to make the effort to go to the polls and vote down-ballot Republican for your state and congressional candidates.”
    The GOP candidate has not extended a hand of fellowship to young Republicans across the college, an action that is drawing many youths away from the Republican campaign train.
    During a discussion with Foreign Press Centres Tour participants at the UVA, members of College Republicans declined to comment on Trump campaign. They rather focused on pushing the candidacy of Mr. Tom Garrett, who is vying for the U.S. Congress membership in 2018 mid-term elections.
     
  • Hillary to resume campaign Thursday after pneumonia treatment

    Hillary to resume campaign Thursday after pneumonia treatment

    U.S. Democratic presidential nominee Hilary Clinton, who has been staying at home since swooning at a 9/11 memorial ceremony due to pneumonia, will return to campaign trail on Thursday.
    The former secretary of state is set to speak at the Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute gala in Washington D.C. on Thursday and due in several battleground states next week, said her campaign, which has promised to release Clinton’s medical records later this week.
    Donald Trump, her Republican rival, also promised to offer up more information about his health later this week, following quarrels between the two campaigns over which candidate is more secret about their health and wealth.
    A damaging video of Clinton’s faint at Ground Zero on Sunday has turned the issue of health transparency onto the central stage in their White House bids.
    Clinton was diagnosed pneumonia two days before she fainted on Sunday but her campaign had kept it quiet until the video was put online.
    However, earlier on Tuesday, Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid blasted the media for having blown Clinton’s pneumonia out of proportion.
    “You’ve all been unfair to Hillary, look at Donald Trump at his medical records, which are nonexistent,” he told reporters at a news conference.
    Also on Tuesday, Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Kaine suggested that Clinton’s decision to keep campaigning despite suffering from pneumonia was influenced by the historic nature of her bid to become the country’s first woman president.
    The U.S is “uniquely bad at electing women to office,” the Virginia senator told a crowd at the University of Michigan, citing it a factor affecting her race against the New York billionaire.
    Only 19 per cent of the U.S. Congress is female, though it is the highest percentage in the country’s history, Kaine noted.
    The September race is observed unexpectedly rough for Clinton as her wounds were rubbed salt into continuously, including a gaffe about Republican “deplorable.”
    A series of national poll results show that her lead over Trump has been narrowed since Labour Day.
  • Powell: Trump is an international disgrace

    Powell: Trump is an international disgrace

    The former U.S Secretary of State Colin Powell has labeled Republican presidential,  nominee, Donald Trump as “national disgrace and an international pariah.”

    Colin Powel in his leaked e-mails also described Trump as racist. CNN reports.

    The former secretary of state tore into Trump as an embarrassing figure to represent the United States.

    “Trump is a national disgrace and an international pariah,” Powell wrote in June.

    “He appeals to the worst angels of the GOP nature and poor white folks,” Powell wrote in another email.

    As Trump’s lead in the Republican primary solidified, Powell complained to CNN’s Fareed Zakaria about the network’s political coverage.

    “That’s what the 99% believe. When Trump couldn’t keep that up he said he also wanted to see if the certificate noted that he was a Muslim,” Powell wrote in an August email.

    The messages, the existences of which were first reported by BuzzFeed and The Intercept, were posted to DCleaks, an organization affiliated with other recent hacks of high-profile figures.

    The emails are notable for their candor about Trump. Powell, who oversaw the State Department during the beginning of George W. Bush’s administration, hasn’t endorsed Trump and has largely sidestepped questions about his thoughts on the controversial GOP nominee.

    Powell also lampooned Trump’s proposal that he could win over the African-American population.

     

  • Trump pledges big US military expansion

    Republican presidential nominee, Donald Trump, has said he will expand all areas of the United States military if he wins November’s election.

    Mr. Trump called for more troops, more planes and more boats at a rally in Philadelphia.

    He also wants U.S generals to come up with a plan to defeat the self-styled Islamic State (IS) in his first 30 days in the White House, the BBC reports.

    Recent polls show the race for the presidency has narrowed.

    Democrats and even some Republicans have painted Mr. Trump as unfit to serve as U.S commander-in-chief but he has made up some ground on rival Hillary Clinton.

    In his speech he called his vision for the U.S military “peace through strength.”

    “I am proposing a new foreign policy focused on advancing America’s core national interests, promoting regional stability, and producing an easing of tensions in the world. This will require rethinking the failed policies,” he said.

    “Our adversaries are chomping at the bit,” he added.