Tag: Hillary Clinton

  • Hillary Clinton says U.S. threats of war with North Korea ‘dangerous, short-sighted

    Hillary Clinton says U.S. threats of war with North Korea ‘dangerous, short-sighted

    Former U.S. presidential candidate Hillary Clinton on Wednesday said “cavalier” threats to start war on the Korean peninsula were “dangerous and short-sighted”.

    Clinton, however, urged the U.S. to get all parties to the negotiation table.

    Clinton also called on China to take a “more out-front role” in enforcing sanctions against North Korea aimed at curbing its missile and nuclear development.

    “There is no need for us to be bellicose and aggressive over North Korea,” Clinton told the World Knowledge Forum in Seoul, stressing the need for more pressure on North Korea and diplomacy to bring Pyongyang to talks.

    Tension between Pyongyang and Washington has soared following series of weapons tests by North Korea and a string of increasingly bellicose exchanges between U.S. President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

    “Picking fights with Kim Jong Un puts a smile on his face,” Clinton said, without mentioning Trump by name.

    Clinton also indirectly referred to Trump’s social media comments on North Korea, saying, “the insults on Twitter have benefited North Korea, I don’t think they’ve benefited the United States”.

    The war of words has seen Trump call the North Korean leader “little rocket man” on a suicide mission, and vow to destroy the country if it threatens the U.S. or its allies.

    In turn, the North called Trump “mentally deranged” and a “mad dog”.

    Talks between the adversaries have long been urged by China in particular, but Washington and its ally, Japan have been reluctant while Pyongyang continues to pursue a goal of developing a nuclear-tipped missile to hit the U.S.

    On Tuesday, Deputy Secretary of State, John J. Sullivan, said the U.S. did not rule out the eventual possibility of direct talks with North Korea.

    The situation on the Korean peninsula was now touch-and-go point and a nuclear war may break out any moment”, North Korea’s Deputy UN Amb. Kim In Ryong had told a UN General Assembly committee on Monday.

    In Seoul, the vice foreign minister said South Korea was considering levying its own sanctions on the North, although no decision had yet been made.

    NAN

  • Trump calls Russia probe biggest ‘witch hunt in American history’

    Trump calls Russia probe biggest ‘witch hunt in American history’

    President Donald Trump on Thursday called the appointment of a special counsel to lead the Russia probe as “the single greatest witch hunt” in U.S. history, hours after he said he looked forward to a thorough investigation.

    In the face of rising pressure from Capitol Hill, the U.S. Justice Department named former FBI Director Robert Mueller on Wednesday as special counsel to investigate alleged Russian interference in the 2016 U.S. election and possible collusion between Trump’s campaign and Moscow.

    Trump said in a statement that “a thorough investigation will confirm what we already know; there was no collusion between my campaign and any foreign entity.”

    In a pair of Twitter posts on Thursday morning, Trump made clear he was unhappy with the latest development to roil his administration.

    “With all of the illegal acts that took place in the Clinton campaign and Obama Administration, there was never a special counsel appointed!” Trump wrote, misspelling the word counsel as he referred to former President Barack Obama and former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton.

    “This is the single greatest witch hunt of a politician in American history!”

    The comments mirrored a speech by Trump on Wednesday, before Mueller’s appointment was announced, in which he said no politician in history “has been treated worse or more unfairly.”

    Russia has denied U.S. intelligence agencies’ conclusion that it interfered in the election campaign to try to tilt the vote in Trump’s favor. Trump, a Republican, has long bristled at the notion that Russia played any role in his November election victory, and has denied any collusion between his campaign and Moscow.

    The appointment of a special counsel to take over the Russia probe was widely praised by Democrats and Trump’s fellow Republicans.

    Republican Representative Charlie Dent said there was no question the Russians meddled in the election.

    The goal of the special counsel probe, he said, was to determine whether there was collusion between Trump associates and Russia to do so.

    “I believe that’s why we’re having this investigation, to find out if in fact there was collusion.

    “I certainly hope there wasn’t any but if there is there are going to be very serious consequences,” Dent told CNN.

    Moments before Trump weighed in on Twitter, Democratic Senator Joe Manchin welcomed the special counsel investigation and said it was important to get facts in the Russia probe.

    “I am not on a witch hunt. I am on a fact-finding mission,” he said on CNN.

     

  • Hillary, Bill Clinton arrive Trump’s inauguration

    Hillary, Bill Clinton arrive Trump’s inauguration

    Democratic presidential candidate in the Nov. 8, 2016 election and Donald Trump’s arch challenger, Hillary Clinton has arrived Trump’s inauguration venue at the Capitol Hill.

    Former President Bill Clinton accompanied the former First Lady, confirming their attendance in spite of the bitter loss and divisive presidential campaigns in U.S. history, according to the Correspondent of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) monitoring the inauguration.

    The Clintons, sources said, decided to attend Trump’s inauguration “out of a sense of duty and respect for the American democratic process”.

    Former President Jimmy Carter and former Vice President Dick Cheney and wife have also arrived the Capitol Hill venue of the inauguration.

    Former President George W. Bush and wife, Laura, are also attending Trump’s inauguration.

    There are currently six living U.S. presidents, when Trump will have been sworn-in, a record number during any inauguration, NAN gathered.

    Former President Bush and former first lady Laura Bush’s attendance of Trump’s inauguration was announced by the 43rd president’s office.

    The statement said the couple “is pleased to be able to witness the peaceful transfer of power – a hallmark of American democracy – and swearing-in of President Trump and Vice President Pence.”

    “President and Mrs  Bush will attend the 58th Presidential Inauguration Ceremony on Jan. 20, 2017, at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C.,” the Bush’s statement read.

    “They are pleased to be able to witness the peaceful transfer of power — a hallmark of American democracy — and swearing-in of President Trump and Vice President Pence.”

    Carter was the only former president to RSVP to President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration.

    Bush’s father, former President George H.W. Bush, will not be attending due to his health, a spokesman reportedly said.

    Former presidents traditionally attend the ceremonial transfer of power at the U.S Capitol.

    In spite of being a fellow Republican, Bush did not vote for Trump on Nov. 8 election, a decision Trump later described as “sad”.

    Bush’s father voted for Clinton, according to sources.

    During the primaries, both Bushes supported their family member, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, who was a fierce challenger of Trump’s.

    Just a week after the election, George W. Bush lamented the role that anger played in politics today.

    “I understand anger, and some people may have been angry when I was president. But anger shouldn’t drive policy”, Bush said in Dallas in a rare public speech.

    “What needs to drive policy is what’s best for the people who are angry.”

    NAN reports that outgoing two-term 44th President Barack Obama who will hand-over to Trump, the 45th U.S. President, is the first black to have been elected U.S. president. (NAN)

  • Clinton urges supporters to ‘keep fighting’

    Clinton urges supporters to ‘keep fighting’

    Candidate of the Democrats Party at the just concluded 2016 election in the United States, Hillary Clinton has urged her supporters not to give up fighting in the face of Donald Trump’s impending presidency.

    She made the statement at a Children’s Defense Fund benefit in Washington D.C., on Wednesday night, her first outing after conceding defeat to Mr Donald Trump.

    Clinton said: “I will admit coming here tonight wasn’t the easiest thing for me. There have been a few times this past week where all I wanted to do is curl up with a good book or our dogs and never leave our house again.”

    But Clinton argued against retreating from the world in her brief speech, given at a fundraiser for the organisation that launched her career as an activist for children and families 45 years ago. Her mentor Marian Wright Edelman, the group’s founder, introduced her to the crowd as “our president,” highlighting the fact that Clinton won the popular vote last Tuesday.

    Clinton sounded a less defiant note but asked her supporters to pick themselves up and continue to fight for their principles in the face of defeat. “I often quote Marian when she says that ‘Service is the rent we pay for living,”

    Clinton said. “Well, you don’t get to stop paying rent just because things don’t go your way.”

    Clinton shared some of her personal pain at her loss last week. “I know many of you are deeply disappointed about the results of this election,” she said. “I am, too. More than I can ever express.”

    But she insisted that things would get better, and emphasised what she sees as one positive development that came out of what was an unprecedentedly nasty campaign. “For the first time ever, a broad consensus emerged about the importance of affordable quality child care and paid family leave,” Clinton said, referring to the Trump campaign’s proposals in those areas.

    But she also appeared to obliquely criticise Trump, saying, “No child should be afraid to go to school because they’re African-American or Latino or have a disability,” possibly in reference to reports of bullying in schools since Trump’s victory. She also highlighted the plight of a young girl who fears that her parents could be deported.

    “The divisions laid bare by this election run deep, but please listen to me when I say that America is worth it. Our children are worth it,” she said.

    “Believe in our country, fight for our values and never, ever give up.”

     

  • Donald Trump: The triumph and the angst

    Donald Trump: The triumph and the angst

    Benumbed.  Blitzed. Bewildered.  Confounded. Devastated.  Discomb-obulated.  Disconcerted.  Disconsolate.  Discomposed.  Dismayed.  Disoriented.  Distraught. Dumbfounded.  Outraged. Nonplussed. Poleaxed.  Shellacked. Shell-shocked.

    No, I have not been looking up the Thesaurus nor playing word games. I had asked some friends, expatriate Nigerians and Nigerians “on ground,” to indicate in just one word how they felt when it dawned on them that Donald Trump was about to be proclaimed president-elect of the United States.

    The foregoing is a selection from their responses.

    Full marks, again, to the percipient lady of the house.  She had seen it coming, right from the   debates that preceded the Iowa caucus.  As they unfolded, the primaries merely confirmed her premonition.  In vain did I point out that bluster and humbug and vulgar abuse might move a lot  of people to line up behind Trump, but would not be enough propel him to the nomination.

    By mid-May, Trump had won more than enough delegates to clinch the GOP ticket.

    Okay, winning the nomination is one thing.  Winning the presidential election is a different game altogether, whether Trump’s opponent was Bernie Sanders or Hillary Clinton.  Trump had come to the end of the road, I assured the lady of the house.

    But the surging crowds at Trump’s rallies, the enthusiasm with which they embraced even his most outlandish pronouncements  as if they flowed from Holy Writ, the way he worked them up to denounce with greater vehemence every person, idea, programme, policy or institution he denounced, convinced her that she had it right.

    Just wait until they have their first televised debate, I told the lady of the house.  Trump will be shown up as the empty suit he is, totally unfit to be president of the United States.  And that  was precisely what happened in their first one-on-one debate. In manner, speech, comportment and deportment, he looked anything but presidential.

    After that debate, Clinton overtook Trump for the first time in virtually every poll.

    “I told you so,” I teased the lady of the house, my mojo restored.   “In a one-on-one debate, Hillary Clinton will put Trump in his place any day.”

    Still, she was not impressed.  Her instincts told her Trump would prevail, even without those treacherous emails that dogged Hillary Clinton’s every step.  At that point, I thought I should invoke the authority of my professional calling to settle the matter.

    “Political journalism is my line of business,” I told the lady of the house portentously, as if she did not know it or had forgotten.  “If Trump wins, never trust me again.”

    It was when Trump won that I realized I had made an exorbitant wager, rendered all the more reckless by its open-endedness.    “Never trust me again,” period, I had said, instead of “Never trust my political judgment again.”

    I hope I can still walk it back.

    On the eve of the election, the most credible polls had Trump trailing by several percentage points. Nate Silver, the statistics wizard who had predicted with stunning precision Barack Obama’s victories in the 2008 and 2012 elections and the attendant distribution of seats in the United States Congress, scored the odds 76/33 Clinton. 

    The New York Times revised downwards its  forecast from 91/9 Clinton to 81/17 Clinton after FBI director James Comey mischievously reopened investigations into Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server as  U.S. Secretary of State.

    That was the point at which Hillary Clinton’s sizeable lead, which had spiked when tapes of Trump spouting demented “locker room” talk about women surfaced and one woman after another came out to report how he had groped, fondled and grabbed them by unmentionable parts of their anatomy — it was at this point that Hillary Clinton’s lead began to shrink.

    The race tightened, but not to the point that anyone could with confidence tip Trump to win.  Hillary Clinton still held a clear but not insurmountable lead.

    A few polls, it is true, had Trump winning.  But even the director of one such poll, a professor at Emory University, rejected his own findings as wildly implausible and scored the race for Hillary Clinton.  Other polls predicting a Trump win were dismissed as unreliable.

    In the event, Hillary Clinton won the popular ballot by some 250 000 votes.  But Trump prevailed  in the Electoral College, the platform that really counts in the election of president of the United States.

    The same Donald Trump whom Mitt Romney, the Republican nominee in the 2012 had described as a “a fraud” and “a phoney” who would drive the United States to the point of collapse, will soon have his finger on the nuclear trigger.

    “He’s playing the American public for suckers.”  Romney said of Trump.

    As Romney saw it, Trump had neither the temperament nor the judgment to be president. “Dishonesty,” he said, is Trump’s hallmark.

    The same Trump who elevated bigotry, xenophobia, demagoguery and misogyny to cardinal virtues.  The same Trump who had not paid federal income tax in 18 years, who ran a bogus university that issued worthless diplomas upon upfront payment of fees it would be courteous    to call unconscionable. The same Trump who waltzed unscratched through a trail of   bankruptcies even as his partners and shareholders faced certain ruin.  The same Trump who regularly stiffed his workers.

    The same Trump who built his gaudy hotel towers with cheap imports from China as the           domestic steel industry languished in terminal illness, and with even cheaper labour from         Mexico and Poland, the minimum wage be damned.  Even his signature “Make America Great Again” cap was made in China.

    The same Trump who . . .  But why belabor the point?

    The conventional wisdom was that a man with such a political baggage and a threadbare résumé of public service to boot had no business seeking the presidency of the United States and that a critical mass of Americans who believe that decency and integrity and trustworthiness and the values that undergird America’s claim to exceptionalism would see through the bluster and the bombast and mendacity and the megalomania and send him back to the world of Reality TV for which his talents are best suited.

    I allied myself with that wisdom, which must now go down as one of the most egregious political misjudgments of this or any era. That a great many among the best authorities made the same misjudgment is of course no exculpation.

    Even Trump’s camp was bracing itself for the worst. The mood there was gloomy, saturnine. The campaign was over.

     

    The frenzied crowds had returned to their domains, leaving Trump and his inner circle to contemplate not just the possibility but the imminent certainty of loss, of Trump figuring as just another loser in a long line of those he always took great delight in dismissing as losers.

    Trump will now have to do on the American landscape what he was never able to do to his rickety business empire:  Turn America from the doomed dystopia he painted in campaign stop after campaign stop and tweet after tweet into a glittering utopia.

    He is already learning that you don’t shoot first and aim later.  Having now found that the Affordable Health Care Act, the so-called Obamacare, is not the devil’s blueprint, he is saying he will retain two of its most revolutionary provisions:  the one that keeps children covered by their parent’s health insurance at no extra cost until they reach age 26, and the one prohibiting denial of coverage to persons with pre-existing conditions.

    However, expect no sobriety from the GOP.

    Basking in triumphalism, it is frantically looking for ways of eviscerating Obama’s legacy without troublesome recourse to established procedure.   It says it has found a way of getting rid of Obamacare through some chink in the Budget process

    Expect more shortcuts, and more in-your-face usurpations.

    The lady of the house had it right.  She had worked in some mean establishments and interacted with a great deal of mainstream Americans across the Midwest.  From those interactions she had gained the insights that helped her make the right call, unlike the man of the house who had been  cloistered in the Ivory Tower and had interacted for the most part with its denizens.

  • Clinton’s prophesy: TB Joshua breaks silence

    Clinton’s prophesy: TB Joshua breaks silence

    Prophet TB Joshua has finally broken his silence after his prophecy that Hillary Clinton would win the US presidential election did not ‘come to pass’.

    The General Overseer of the Synagogue Church of All Nations (SCOAN) has sinced been mocked by many on social media after the prediction which ‘failed’ was first deleted and then reinstated on his official Facebook page following Donald Trump’s unexpected victory in the keenly contested election.

    However, members and suporters of the controversial pastor have been quick to defend him saying that his prophecy was indeed realised, because Mrs Clinton won the popular vote, although she still lost the election based on the US system of electoral college votes which saw Trump as winner of the poll.

    A new statement on Mr Joshua’s Facebook page echoes this argument, saying:

    We might have great cathedrals, huge bells, and all kinds of activities that are good by human standards but human point of view is limited.

    1 Corinthians 1:25. The foolishness of God is wiser than that of men and the weakness of God is stronger than that of men. There is no shortcut to spiritual maturity unless earthly understanding gives way to spiritual enlightenment.

    I see many people trying to interpret prophets on the basis of their own minds and ideas. The prophecy seems to cause uproar, to many who gave it different meaning and interpretation.

    Finally, campaigns and elections in any democratic country in the world are never about one person, it is about the country we care and love. Whichever way it happens, we must accept the outcome and then look to the future (God), the Author and Finisher.

    Democracy is all about accommodation. All democrats must value the process of democracy more than the product.

    God bless the United States of America.

    So how should we interpret these comments? Since Mr Joshua is described on his own church’s website as a prophet, is he saying that other people who are not “at the same level” as him and are therefore unable to see what he sees? Or is he saying that none of us as humans cannot hope to truly understand the word of God?

  • What Trump’s victory could mean to African-Americans

    What Trump’s victory could mean to African-Americans

    Following the rhetorics of the United States President-elect, Mr Donald Trump, during the campaign for the election, Aamer Madhani, the Chicago correspondent for USA TODAY has done some findings.

    Madhani reported that in the aftermath of the Republican’s victory, callers and hosts on black talk radio have lamented what the future could hold for African-Americans under Trump, who in his rhetoric on the stump would awkwardly refer to African-Americans as “the blacks” while suggesting they have nothing to lose in voting for him, at the helm.

    “He’s not only opposed to the Affordable Care Act,” said civil rights leader Rev. Al Sharpton on his nationally syndicated radio show. “He’s opposed to criminal justice reform, he’s opposed to dealing with police reform, he’s opposed to dealing with stop-and-frisk, he’s opposed to the Voting Rights Act… He’s trying to bring us back to the days that we fought to get away from.”

    Rashad Robinson, a spokesman for the Color of Change PAC, which over the summer successfully lobbied several corporations to withdraw sponsorship of the Republican National Convention, was even more blunt, calling Trump’s election victory “a devastating blow to black communities and the safety and civil rights of all Americans.”Color of Change PAC, which over the summer successfully lobbied several corporations to withdraw sponsorship of the Republican National Convention, was even more blunt, calling Trump’s election victory “a devastating blow to black communities and the safety and civil rights of all Americans.”

    “All across the country, people awoke this morning to the election of a racist demagogue as our 45th president and the reality that extreme, right-wing political forces now control all three branches of the United States government,” Robinson said Wednesday.

    The embrace by the American electorate of Trump, coming on the heels of twice electing the nation’s first African-American president, only exacerbated concerns among some leaders in the black community that the nation could be taking a step backwards on race relations.

    In an emotional moment on CNN as the election results rolled in, political analyst Van Jones, a former adviser to Obama, even mourned that voters turn to Trump was the result of “white-lash,” a racially-tinged rejection of Obama.

    The rise of Trump, who vowed to be a “law and order” president, also comes in the midst of the Black Lives Matter movement, the grassroots push that was birthed following the 2013 acquittal of a neighbourhood watch volunteer for the fatal shooting of African-American teen Trayvon Martin in Florida.

    The movement, which put the spotlight on the fractious relationship between African-Americans and law enforcement in many communities throughout the country, has only grown after high-profile police shooting incidents in Baton Rouge, La., Chicago, Ferguson, Mo., and elsewhere.

    Both Trump and Hillary Clinton faced criticism from BLM throughout the campaign. Some activists declined to support the Democratic nominee, citing rising incarceration rates, and changes in welfare rules during her husband, President Bill Clinton’s time in the White House that negatively impacted black families.

    “Because I was not comfortable with either candidate, I made the choice to abstain from voting for either candidate,” said Jomo Kenyatta, an activist with Black Lives Matter Savannah. “My conscience would not allow me to vote for either.”candidate I made the choice to abstain from voting for either candidate,” said Jomo Kenyatta, an activist with Black Lives Matter Savannah. “My conscience would not allow me to vote for either.”candidate I made the choice to abstain from voting for either candidate,” said Jomo Kenyatta, an activist with Black Lives Matter Savannah. “My conscience would not allow me to vote for either.”

    After it became clear that Trump had defeated Hillary Clinton earlier Wednesday, former KKK imperial wizard David Duke took to Twitter to boast “our people have played a HUGE role in electing Trump!” Duke, who made a failed run for Senate in Louisiana, also celebrated Trump’s victory with a post on social media showing a group of people waving Confederate flags with one holding a sign that read “Southern Lives Matter.”

    Gregory Seal Livingston, a civil rights activist in Chicago, said he wasn’t surprised by Trump’s victory.

    “I always felt like Trump was making private conversations public,” Livingston said. “For the Millenial generation, this moment is going to be a real education.”

    In response to the election results, NAACP President, Cornell William Brooks raised his concern that “the 2016 campaign has regularised racism, standardised anti-Semitism, de-exceptionalised xenophobia and mainstreamed misogyny.”Cornell William Brooks raised his concern that “the 2016 campaign has regularised racism, standardised anti-Semitism, de-exceptionalised xenophobia and mainstreamed misogyny.”

    “During this critical period of transition, we are now calling upon the next president to speak and act with the moral clarity necessary to silence the dog-whistle racial politics that have characterized recent months and have left many of our fellow citizens snarling at one another in anger and even whimpering in fear,” Brooks said in a statement.

    Larry Davis, the founder and director of the Center on Race and Social Problems at the University of Pittsburgh, said he remained shocked by the election results and was grappling to understand the long-term impact that Trump’s rise could have on the country.

    “I’ve been trying to put it in historical perspective, and I keep coming back to the end of Reconstruction after (federal) troops left the South and what blacks then must have thought of that,” Davis said. “I try to put myself in their place and what it must have been like to know that the group that was looking after you is no longer looking after you. It’s stunning for the country.”

  • UN congratulates US president – elect, Trump

    The Secretary-General of the United Nations on Wednesday congratulated the President-elect of the United States of America, Mr Donald Trump.

    Accordint to the statement, the Secretary-General commending Trump for the hard-fought and often divisive campaign.

    “I congratulate Mr. Donald Trump on his election as forty-fifth President of the United States of America. 

    “In the aftermath of a hard-fought and often divisive campaign, it is worth recalling and reaffirming that the unity in diversity of the United States is one of the country’s greatest strengths.  I encourage all Americans to stay true to that spirit.

    “Today’s global challenges demand concerted global action and joint solutions.  As a founding member of the United Nations and permanent member of the Security Council, the United States is an essential actor across the international agenda.  People everywhere look to the United States to use its remarkable power to help lift humanity up and to work for the common good.  

    “The United Nations will count on the new Administration to strengthen the bonds of international cooperation as we strive together to uphold shared ideals, combat climate change, advance human rights, promote mutual understanding and implement the Sustainable Development Goals to achieve lives of peace, prosperity and dignity for all.  

    “Now more than ever, we must mobilize around the principles and common values of the United Nations Charter.  

    “I would also like to express my deep appreciation to former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton for a lifetime commitment to peace, the advancement of women and the well-being of children.  

    “She has been a powerful global symbol of women’s empowerment, and I have no doubt that she will continue to contribute to our work across the world,” the statement read.

  • Global markets plunge, gold soars in wake of Trump victory

    Global stocks plunged, the price of gold soared and the dollar nose-dived on Wednesday in the wake of U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump winning the White House.

    Report from Frankfurt showed that eurozone’s blue-chip Euro Stoxx 50 index dropped 2.74 per cent in opening trading to 3940.6 points.

    It indicated that the dollar was down about 2 per cent against the world’s major currencies as Trump supporters celebrated victory over Democrat candidate, Hillary Clinton.

    It added that the price of gold surged about 3 per cent to 1,314 dollars an ounce compared with Tuesday as investors frantically searched for safe-haven investments.

  • US election: Hillary Clinton thanks supporters

    US election: Hillary Clinton thanks supporters

    Following her upset by Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump in the historic U.S. presidential poll,  Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton has prepared her supporters for the unexpected electoral crushing her campaign suffered.

    This is just as Trump supporters are up in jubilation following his projected early lead over the Democratic nominee.

    Clinton, in her Twitter handle, thanked her team, saying she was proud of them.

     

    “This team has so much to be proud of. Whatever happens tonight, thank you for everything,” Clinton tweeted as uncertainty cast over her eventual victory among her supporters.

    Trump has won  in several crucial battleground states, including Florida and North Carolina, giving the Republican nominee a path to victory. He is also in the lead in democratic strongholds of Michigan and Pennsylvania.

    Supporters of Clinton watched nervously as healthy leads that had been predicted in polling for much of the past several months appeared to evaporate while the votes were tallied.

    A CNN reporter at the Clinton Election headquarters in New York said supporters  were crying  as they streamed out  in despair after they watched the incredible results coming in.