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Mark Sanford Threatens to Pull Support of Trump

The latest USA Today/Rock the Vote poll released on Sunday found that while 56 per cent of voters under 35 say they would vote for Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton, one in five in this age group support Trump, Xinhua news agency reported.

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This is the main message Trump expressed in another Twitter rant over the weekend. For standing against Donald Trump, she’s faced an onslaught of criticism on social media-and a lot of it has been sexist. But on Thursday he said, “I’ll just keep doing the same thing I’m doing right now”.

These days, Trump, a creature of the media, hates what he is reading and seeing.

Trump is explicitly running against the news media, even while running a campaign that relies mostly on news coverage instead of paid ads to communicate with Americans. So it may make sense for conservative donors to shun Trump and concentrate on these Senate races, in the hope that enough voters will split their tickets.

Donald Trump is giving a major national security speech in Ohio Monday- this after the Wall Street Journal urged the GOP to dump Trump if he can’t turn it around by Labor Day. A staggering 72% view Trump unfavorably. The poll was conducted with registered voters in NY. At the moment, it’s the Trump Party versus the Democratic Party.

One motivation cited by both Clinton and Trump supporters: Keeping the other candidate out of the White House.

“We’ve really been given a false narrative”, Trump said of his struggles in Utah.

Siena also found that the majority of Republicans believe Hillary Clinton will win the election.

It’s comments like those that Clinton has seized to try to contrast her “serious, steady leadership” with the more volatile approach she says Trump would take to running the country.

In Ohio, which has 18 electoral votes, the latest polls released after the Republican and Democratic National Conventions ended last month shows that Clinton holds a slim advantage over Trump, according to The Columbus Dispatch.

Former South Carolina governor and current congressman Mark Sanford said Monday he’s wavering in his support of Donald Trump, and could abandon the GOP presidential nominee all together if he continues to refuse to release his income tax returns.

In this August 8, 2016, photo, Republican vice presidential candidate Indiana Gov. Mike Pence speaks during a campaign stop in Council Bluffs, Iowa.

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And that’s without even emerging victorious in any of the states Romney captured, which polls show she does have a good chance of winning.

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