Clinton, Kaine Release New Campaign Book
Clinton said there was a phone conversation between Bondi and the Republican nominee at the time.
Clinton’s 25-minute question-and-answer session was her first extensive availability with reporters since early December.
Among likely voters, Trump scored 45 percent to Clinton’s 43%, with Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson taking 7% and the Green Party’s Jill Stein trailing with just 2%.
“I think of course it’s fair game”.
Some 59% said they think Clinton will be the next president, and just 34% expect Trump to emerge victorious.
She added that those same individuals view Trump as “a danger and a risk”.
Responding to a question, Trump said no one is playing Hillary in preparation for the three presidential debates.
Clinton said sometimes these types of logistical dust-ups are “annoying” but they’re not the reason a president attends these types of meetings.
“She didn’t have the energy to go to Louisiana”. It was viewed as a snub by Chinese officials.
Republican vice presidential candidate Mike Pence will return to his old stomping grounds and speak to House Republicans next week.
“They contradict each other”, Clinton said.
Campaigning in Virginia Beach, Virginia, Trump vowed to take aggressive action to help veterans at home and confront threats overseas including acts of terrorism from the Islamic State group.
Clinton’s paths to 270 electoral votes are many while Trump’s are few.
A graphic of electoral votes, with Clinton’s in blue and Trump’s in red. Ten states are too close to call, but Ms. Clinton has a clear edge in terms of Electoral College votes – the key determining factor of the outcome.
Trump on board his campaign plane yesterday.
Democrats have pounded Trump on national security and aggressively warned voters that he lacks the temperament to control the world’s most powerful military. Dozens of GOP national security leaders released a letter last month warning that Trump would risk the nation’s “national security and well-being”.
Clinton’s campaign is spending big to undercut Trump’s message in a new TV ad also released Tuesday entitled, “Sacrifice”. She specifically cited his claim that he knows more about the Islamic State that military generals do, and his now-infamous remark that Sen. She pointed to her endorsements from retired Marine Gen. John Allen, who blasted Trump at the Democratic National Committee, and former Central Intelligence Agency deputy director Mike Morell.
It also shows Trump saying he had sacrificed a lot in comparison to families who have lost loved ones in conflict.
“Our veterans deserve better”, reads a line at the end of the ad, which is airing in Ohio, Florida, Iowa, Nevada and Pennsylvania.
The candidates were joined by their running mates yesterday in OH, a signal of the importance each campaign places on the Buckeye State.
The 256-page book, released Tuesday, details their policy proposals, including ideas for economic growth, uniting the American people, and foreign policy and policy.
The former secretary of state said she is concerned about “credible reports about Russian government interference in our elections”.