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Trump boosts minority outreach with Philadelphia visit

“For the last two months he said he was not going to deport people without criminal records”.

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Among other things, Trump has threatened a trade war with China and Mexico, and says he would renegotiate America’s existing trade agreements. “The truth falls on deaf ears when you lack integrity”. He’s expected to visit a church with a predominantly black congregation while there Saturday.

Even if Trump has spent more of his time to date speaking to majority-white crowds in majority-white communities, he’s not yet made the sale with white men. The network originally planned to live stream the interview but changed the plans.

Two months from Election Day, Hillary Clinton holds a clear advantage over Donald Trump in almost every measure traditionally used to gauge success in presidential races. “See you again in four years”, Burns tweeted.

Black and Hispanic voters, meanwhile, also form key pieces of the religious vote, and they lean heavily in Democrats’ favor.

“The message is legitimate, but the messenger is completely illegitimate – that’s the irony”, said Van Jones, a political activist and commentator.

It’s useful that Donald Trump has clarified his plans for Larissa Martinez, who started classes this week as a freshman at Yale University, having graduated in the spring as class valedictorian at her Texas high school.

Mrs. Obama’s task will be to urge all voters, but especially young people, in hotly contested Virginia to support Clinton and running mate Tim Kaine in the November 8 election.

Donna Brazile, acting chair of the Democratic National Committee, has rejected Trump’s characterization of the relationship between the party and black voters. She has done nothing to consolidate the “bounce” she enjoyed after her convention, because she has very little new to say. “I really don’t know when or how or if the Republican community will ever recover”.

Brazile also argued that the party has delivered results for African-Americans, pointing to falling unemployment, health insurance overhauls and fights to ensure voter access at the polls.

And no one has been hurt by the open borders immigration policies more than the African-American community. But they have voted overwhelmingly for Democratic presidential candidates starting in 1936, when Franklin D. Roosevelt got 71 percent of the black vote, and peaking at 96 percent for Barack Obama’s election as the first African-American president in 2008. According to the Pew Research Center, 39 percent of Americans now self-identify as Independents, 32 percent as Democrats and 23 percent as Republicans. For instance Ohio Gov. John Kasich got the support of 26 percent of black voters when he ran for reelection in 2014.

A Siena College poll in early August showed Trump trailing Clinton by 25 percentage points when minor party candidates are included in ny.

While polls show a large majority of Hispanic voters oppose Trump, the withdrawal of support from among his small group of Latino backers underscores how hard it is for Trump to broaden his support with minorities and moderate voters. The interview also included Clinton’s claims that the private email server was used “out of convenience” and that former secretary of State Colin Powell talked to her about how he did it.

A look at what the rest of Ohio’s all-Republican statewide line-up has said publicly on Trump reveals lackluster support for the party’s presidential pick. “We appreciate you and what you’ve done, coming to ‘the hood, ‘ as people call it”. He says he’ll vote for Trump because he’s “the better of the bad options”. “They are telling us what we need, and that goes for both sides”.

But Trump’s NY backers insist the Republican candidate will make time for the state both candidates call home, and he’s expected to be in Manhattan in the coming days. Seven percent supported Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson, and two percent supported Jill Stein of the Green Party.

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It’s not clear whether Trump’s national campaign advisers, including newly installed campaign CEO Stephen Bannon and campaign manager Kellyanne Conway, are on board with a NY push.

Republican presidential nominee visits Great Faith Ministries in Detroit MI on Saturday