The next minute, he seems light-years away from convincing himself hes ready to run _ a man still reeling from personal tragedy. But, should he announce he is running for president, he will become a target for Republicans.
Donald Trump on Thursday signed the Republican National Committee pledge saying he will support the Republican nominee – and therefore not run as an independent candidate – if he loses the GOP nod.
“Promise me you’ll be all right, because no matter what happens, I’m going to be all right“. I say the rosary and I find it to be incredibly comforting. You can’t do that. Never in the modern era of television and social media has a president or vice...
By the usual that voters sometimes use to guage presidential candidates, Trump in all probability shouldn’t have survived his first day within the 2016 race. “When I launched my candidacy, I was asked over and over again, ‘Well, how can you run for the...
A poll by Public Policy Polling, a North Carolina outfit that sometimes leans a little to the left, found that 66 percent of Mr. Trump’s supporters believe President Obama is a Muslim (only 12 percent agree he’s a Christian); 61 percent think he was not born in the...
The Post reported that the Clintons paid Pagliano $5,000 for “computer services” prior to his joining the State Department, according to a financial disclosure form he filed in April 2009. This was confirmed by Clinton’s spokesperson on Saturday.
Platte River Networks, which managed Clinton’s server and personal email network after she left the State Department, has indicated it convey – or “transferred” – emails from the unique server in 2013, in accordance to The Washington Examiner.
Clinton has said that she first learned about the seriousness and depth of the substance abuse problem in New Hampshire and nationally by speaking with Granite Staters in Keene early in her campaign.
Bernie Sanders (I-VT) is leading fellow Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton by nine points in New Hampshire, according to a new NBC News/Marist poll. That number held steady when Biden was removed from the options, with Sanders at 49 percent and Clinton at 38 percent.