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Tim Kaine: Donald Trump ‘pushing’ KKK values
Trump also previewed his immigration plans at the Iowa event, saying that he was developing an “exit-entry tracking system to ensure those who overstay their visas, that they’re quickly removed”.
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Ernst’s comments come after Trump was criticized for calling Clinton a “bigot” at a campaign rally, and repeatedly refused to back down from the claims. “The work has been not only transformational” but also “in line with American interests and values” she said, and the foundation will do “everything we can to make sure that good work continues”.
KARL ROVE: Yeah, but look, that’s the opening part of the argument, look at what’s happened to you for the last 60 or 70 years. She is also targeting moderate voters – especially Republicans – by depicting Trump and his supporters as extremists, and casting the race as “not a normal choice between a Republican and a Democrat”. After all, the law-and-order rhetoric that was the centerpiece of his Republican National Convention address and is a key component of his campaign sounds an very bad lot like an endorsement of the aggressive policing and incarceration policies that formed that 1994 law.
Pence continued to say he felt Clinton “put some sort of racist intention” on Trump supporters, ignoring the fact that Clinton’s speech was specifically referencing admitted racists. Clinton was able to mine some pretty colorful quotes from Donald Trump supporters like Louisiana politician and former Klansman David Duke. In the meantime, he has been softening his tone on immigration and reaching out to African-Americans, a traditional Democratic constituency.
Hours after State Department officials confirmed on Monday that FBI investigators had uncovered almost 15,000 additional emails that Clinton’s attorneys had failed to disclose during their probe into her email practices, Trump called for a special prosecutor to take over the case. Trump has ramped up efforts to appeal to black and Hispanic voters in recent weeks as the polls show him slipping behind rival Hillary Clinton.
Lynette Hardaway and Rochelle Richardson – better known as Diamond and Silk, two African-American sisters supporting Trump who frequently speak at his rallies – confirmed to CNN that the tweet referred to the late West Virginia Sen.
Her explicit framing of Trump as a far-right candidate is new, though, and could help her win the support of more mainstream Republicans in November. But they have been noticeably quiet in defending Trump against Clinton’s charges of racism in his campaign.
Donald Trump’s campaign manager said Sunday he will soon be courting black voters more directly, scheduling events in front of predominantly African-American audiences.
“A man with a long history of racial discrimination who traffics in dark conspiracy theories drawn from the pages of supermarket tabloids and the far dark reaches of the internet should never run our government or command our military”, Clinton said. “It’s gonna remain very strong”, he said. He was chosen as the group’s leader.
As a senator, Byrd spent more than 14 hours filibustering the 1964 Civil Rights Act, a decision he later regretted. “I’m from the South, grew up in a Southern home. and it was that Southern atmosphere in which I grew up and with all of its prejudices and its feelings”.
At the same time, Clinton said, “winding down some of these programs takes time” and that to do anything abrupt could imperil HIV/AIDS programs and other assistance that benefits millions of people around the world.
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The former secretary of state routinely received such briefings when she was in President Barack Obama’s Cabinet.