First Republican congressman pledges to vote Clinton
In an interview with the New York Times, which first reported the endorsement, Whitman said it was time “to put country first before party” and that she would give a “substantial” contribution to Clinton’s campaign.
“While I disagree with her on many issues, I will vote for Mrs. Clinton”, Hanna wrote.
The Democratic nominee also may have outraised her Republican opponent once again. Trump is opposed by the Republican Party establishment, represented by commentators such as George Will and politicians such as the Bush family and Mitt Romney.
The statements in OH about a rigged election follow a Trump tweet from late last week that said the Clinton campaign is trying to stack the upcoming debates against him by scheduling them on the same nights of National Football League games. And it’s coming down not to who is most impressive, but rather who is least offensive – dare I say who is better at shutting the hell up? “I think Bernie is really good about bringing those issues to light”.
The Clinton campaign said it began August with $58 million in the bank. Donald Trump is at 32 percent, largely stuck where’s he’s been for months.
Tensions were already running high between the two high-profile Republicans, who will have to work together closely should Trump win the presidency.
“I like Trump…people are coming into the United States without doing it the right way (referring to illegal immigration), and he wants to see it done the right way, and that’s the way I like it too”, said Penny’s husband Ron.
An average of national polls showed Trump surging to take a narrow lead in the days after the Republican convention.
Secretary Clinton won the convention battle. John McCain (R-Ariz.) and House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.).
Bradshaw told The Associated Press her decision to change her voter registration in her home state of Florida was “a personal decision”, with the tipping point being Trump’s criticism of the Muslim mother of a US soldier killed in Iraq in 2004. Most folks are paying attention to head-to-head polling between Clinton and Trump, also known as the horse race.
Donald Trump’s campaign chair says the candidate is in control and that reports of brewing anger over his inability to stay on message are overblown.
By that measure, Clinton, with the better-received convention, seems to have received a sizably bigger boost from her party’s convention, as FiveThirtyEight and political data blogger Sam Wang have noted.
Trump’s stunning slap at two of the nation’s most prominent Republicans dramatically escalated GOP turmoil barely a week after a convention meant to promote party unity.
If Trump were to lose out to Clinton in November and publicly declare that he believes the election results were rigged then he would breaking the general election tradition, generating uncertain and unpredictable reactions from his followers and fellow Republicans, potentially causing moral outrage.