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Clinton, Kaine campaign in Northern VA
“Do you want a “you’re fired” president or a “you’re hired” president”, asked Kaine. The attack has forced both the candidates to address racial divisions while showing support for US law enforcement officials.
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“It was a cynical, calculated attempt to fan the flames of racial division, and also to undermine people’s faith in our judicial system”, Clinton said. “Or a bridge-builder president?”, Kaine said. “We like the fact that he’s worked with local government”, Veronica Komieczny, a voter from Springfield, said after the rally.
Clinton targeted Trump for his past comments about Hispanics, going after him for accusing a federal judge of bias because of his Mexican heritage and describing Mexicans as rapists and criminals.
That’s a reference to a Quinnipiac poll that came out yesterday showing Trump with a 3-point lead over Clinton in Florida.
“But Mrs. Clinton’s shifting and inaccurate explanations of her email practices at the State Department appear to have resonated more deeply with the electorate”, the Times wrote.
“Because all the awful things that Donald Trump says, Hillary Clinton, in fact, has done in various degrees”.
More than half of Americans think the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee broke the law by using a private email account and server at the State Department and almost 4 in 10 think she did so intentionally, according to the poll.
“She was very clear about infrastructure and education in schools, dealing with student debt, having a strong country so we can be a strong foreign player”, said Helen Manich, an Alexandria resident.
Perez, a former host on “The View”, was attending the League of United Latin American Citizens conference Thursday and was in the audience where Clinton spoke to the group and conference goers. Sixty-three percent have a negative view of Trump, compared to the 31 percent who think well of him. Just 22 percent said they’d be proud and 26 percent excited should America pick Trump on Election Day.
Thursday’s event with Kaine will give Clinton an opportunity to gauge whether the 58-year-old Harvard-educated senator would help her fire up a crowd and make for a comfortable fit on the campaign trail.
The appearance comes as Clinton moves into the final stages of picking her vice president, with an announcement expected as soon as next week.
Republicans are also more likely than Democrats to say Clinton’s email use is a major problem, 85 percent to 22 percent.
He said when he was living in Honduras, the best compliment you could pay to someone was to say they were “listo”, “to say that they were ready”.
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Fifty-six percent of Americans said they would feel afraid and 48 percent say they’d feel regret if Trump wins the White House.