Back in Washington, Clinton, Trump work toward party unity
The verbal sparring between the presumptive Democratic and Republican presidential nominees started Thursday afternoon after President Barack Obama endorsed Clinton. Elizabeth Warren and Vice President Joe Biden will hopefully unify a divided party. The endorsement of other highly visible Democrats like Massachusetts Sen.
Warren has been known for exchanging Twitter insults with the presumptive GOP nominee.
Then today in rapid fire succession, Obama met with Sanders, Sanders said he was staying in, but likely only through next Tuesday’s primary in Washington, D.C.
Clinton said Trump has shown us who he is pretty clearly this election.
On Friday, he retreated to his home in Burlington, Vt.to plot his next steps.
Presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump previewed a new stump speech Friday when speaking before a gathering of social conservatives, hitting Hillary Clinton on a variety of issues while pitching a plan to “life up everyone”.
For Trump, who suffered perhaps the most damaging week of his yearlong campaign, a forum for evangelical Christians proved to be an unlikely safe haven, while Clinton was greeted with cheers and pink “Hillary” signs as she vowed to protect women’s rights from Trump and the Republicans. It allowed Clinton, the first woman to secure a major party’s presidential nomination, to demonstrate that a bedrock progressive cause was a top priority, and it gave her a forum to press her advantage with female voters against Trump.
Trump has been facing criticism over comments he made about the judge presiding over lawsuits against Trump University. He said at one point, “tight we have a very divided nation and we are going to bring our nation back together”.
“Donald assures us as president, he will be “the best” for women”.
Hillary Clinton wrote the “tweet of the day”, on June 9, 2016, according to “Mother Jones” magazine.
He’s the only one of his state’s delegates to not have already thrown his support to Hillary Clinton. He claimed her immigration, education and trade policies would harm working families and “plunge our poor African-American and Hispanic communities into turmoil and even worse despair”. “Things feel quite different now”, she said, citing an upcoming Supreme Court case on Texas abortion laws, which she described as the “biggest challenge to Roe v. Wade in a generation”. Clinton has proposed allowing 65,000 Syrian refugees into the country each year.
“That’s someone who doesn’t hold women in high regard, because if he did, he would trust women to make the right decisions” for their bodies, she said.
But Clinton enjoys a lead among women, Hispanics, immigrants and all those who Trump has attacked during his campaign – but he enjoys support of white collar voters and it could eventually boil down to a few swing states in the race to the white house.