Fox News host and GOP presidential debate moderator Megyn Kelly is gaining support, following the verbal badgering by Republican presidential hopeful Donald Trump.
Specializing in Donald Trump is like “watching a automotive accident” as an alternative of concentrating on an more and more robust Hillary Clinton and taking the Republican presidential marketing campaign within the path it must go, Scott Walker stated Monday.
Jeb Bush and Ted Cruz lag behind Trump with percentages in the teens, meanwhile no other Republican candidate can muster support of over 8 percent of Republicans in online polls.
She also told CNN “The point is women understood that comment and yes, it is offensive”. Trump has called Kelly a “bimbo” and a “lightweight” for asking about his disparaging comments toward women he believes he has slighted him.
Kelly asked Trump Thursday night about his treatment of women, citing comments that he allegedly made about various women being “fat pigs, dogs, slobs, and disgusting animals.”
President Barack Obama, in a Sunday broadcast interview, warned congressional rejection of the deal would make the central goal of keeping Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons harder to achieve. Finally, he points out it provides Iran with tens of billions of dollars it could...
Trump, who is now eclipsing much of the Republican political debate in the US, derives some of his popularity from shunning politically correct language, but his comments have also alienated a number of his Republic peers.
Republican presidential candidate Carly Fiorina took aim at party front-runner Donald Trump over his ties to the Clintons and the revelation that former president called Trump before he got into the race.
Donald Trump is showing no signs of curbing his battle with a Fox News television host, the Republican Party establishment and several presidential primary rivals who are accusing him of disrespecting women.
John McCain’s war hero status already have gotten him in trouble, but he crossed a line for more Americans by tastelessly dismissing one of the Fox News moderators at the Thursday night GOP debate in Cleveland.
WASHINGTON (AP) – Donald Trump’s turbulent relationship with Fox News showed signs of improvement Monday even as Democrat Hillary Rodham Clinton seized on the billionaire businessman’s clash with the network to cast his Republican rivals as being bad for women.