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How Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump Are Prepping for Debates
Trump, the Republican presidential nominee, has so far been badly outspent by his Democratic rival and groups supporting her.
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“I’ve laid out the best I could, the specific plans and ideas that I want to pursue as your president because I have this old-fashioned idea”, Clinton said during a recent speech in Colorado. His counterexample to the “politics of division” was the fact that Trump has spent a solid fortnight not speaking exclusively to the concerns of white voters.
“But the lesson in how he’s run his campaign – and frankly in how he’s run his businesses – doesn’t give you confidence that he would surround himself with a lot of capable people”, he said.
The spot then shifts to praising Trump’s plan, saying “millions of new jobs” will be created, wages will go up, and small business will “thrive”.
The Emerson results imply that Clinton has less than a 6.5 point national lead over Trump.
There’s a reason why Donald Trump is now fumbling his way toward the “middle” on immigration policy, after having gained the Republican nomination on nativist promises to build a wall along our Mexico border and deport 11 million undocumented immigrants.
“I just don’t speak for Donald Trump”, Reince Priebus said Sunday.
Trump signaled his shift in thinking to Fox News’ Sean Hannity during a town hall that aired last week by suggesting he might allow some immigrants to stay: “There’s no amnesty, but we would work with them”. He explained that he’s been talking to “thousands and thousands” of people on this subject.
“I am not taking anything, anyone or any place for granted”.
“When we’re negotiating serious issues with hostile enemies like Iran, it’s important to be able to leverage all the tools that we have against them”, she said. “It’s a very, very hard thing”, he said during the Hannity event.
As Republican vice presidential nominee Mike Pence bounces around Georgia today and tomorrow, he’ll continue to face questions about his running mate’s shifting immigration policy proposals. And they wouldn’t say whether it was worrisome that such a consequential proposal remained unclear so close to the November 8 election.
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The Republican U.S. Senate candidate in IN is declining to say whether he’s comfortable with Donald Trump serving as commander in chief and possessing the nation’s nuclear launch codes. “We’re going to see what happens”.