Share

Republican Party chief ‘furious’ over Donald Trump’s failure to support House speaker

Despite the criticism, Mr Trump tweeted on Wednesday that there was “great unity in my campaign, perhaps greater than ever before”. But keep in mind that Trump’s proposed Muslim ban – which many predicted would sink Trump’s candidacy – didn’t knock him off his first-place standing in the Republican primary contest.

Advertisement

“We are extremely proud of our 69% growth in small dollar donations which shows the broad based support of over one million donors across America”.

Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort was struggling to get the candidate back on message, the source said. The same numbers rated the speeches, 44 percent were more favorable toward Hillary Clinton after watching her speech while 35 percent were more favorable after watching Trump’s. Clinton leads with women by 23 points; Trump leads with men by five. Comments included notes of encouragement from Clinton backers, and expressions of disdain from some who said they could not understand why a Republican would vote for the party’s longtime nemesis.

While Whitman says there are issues on which she and Clinton disagree, it’s time to “put country first before party”.

“I would say right now it is the best in terms of being united that it has been since we began”, he said. For Republicans who’ve been wavering on their support for their party’s nominee, a gap this large in a poll from the outlet most trusted by their voters will certainly not make them feel more confident about standing by Trump’s side. John McCain and Republican House Speaker Paul Ryan.

He said it would be embarrassing to lose against Clinton. “Donald Trump, you are no Ronald Reagan”. “This year is different”, she said.

A Republican congressional aide said there was deep frustration on Capitol Hill that Trump keeps engaging in “petty spats”. We asked Congressman Dent if he plans on casting a ballot for Hillary Clinton.

Advertisement

Donald Trump’s running mate Mike Pence has tried to focus on winning over conservatives who are skeptical of the NY billionaire, but his new boss keeps getting in the way. At the start of June, Trump had only around .3 million on hand, compared to Clinton’s $42 million.

GOP fundraiser Whitman backs Clinton, blasts 'demagogue' Trump