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Meg Whitman Endorses Hillary Clinton, Says Trump Would ‘Endanger National Security’

Pat Toomey. In a recent op-ed piece, Toomey wrote about conservative ideals and how they compare to Trump’s rhetoric, writing in part: “There could come a point at which the differences are so great as to be irreconcilable”.

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Trump’s actions have prominent Republicans such as Sen.

Trump went on to say Sanders and his supporters all know he made a “bad deal” when he endorsed Clinton last month.

The poll shows gains Trump picked up in wake of July’s Republican National Convention – the two presidential hopefuls were virtually tied as the GOP exited Cleveland – erased with Clinton building on momentum from the Democratic National Convention.

Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort told CBS’s “This Morning” that the campaign is comfortable where it stands now and said the news media have built a false narrative in which Democrats are controlling the race to the November 8 election.

In the latest controversy, Mr Trump has refused to support two senior figures in his own party. And he said he’d been misunderstood, too, when he seemingly made fun of a reporter with a disability, an incident featured in one of the ads that his Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton, has been airing. To big applause, Clinton hit Trump as someone who “just seems to delight in insulting women”.

A Republican congressional aide said there was deep frustration on Capitol Hill that Trump keeps engaging in “petty spats”.

The internal tension is complicated by Trump’s frequent travels without his senior advisers and his adult children, who wield significant influence in the campaign, the people close to the campaign said.

But, in looking at some research out of the Gallup organization, Americans were much more positive about the Democratic convention and Hillary Clinton’s speech than they were about Donald Trump’s convention.

Mike Noble, managing partner of OH Predictive Insights and chief pollster, said Trump has failed to catch-up to Trump after the Republican National Convention. The spot is part of an effort by the Democratic nominee and her allies to frame stopping Trump – and backing her candidacy – as a national cause for Americans of all political persuasions.

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In an interview with CNN’s Wolf Blitzer Tuesday evening, Katrina Pierson said, “It was under Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton that changed the rules of engagements that probably cost his life”.

US President Barack Obama