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Clinton heads back to campaign trail after pneumonia scare

According to Thursday’s poll, Donald Trump is the favorite among likely voters with 39 percent of the vote.

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But Trump’s 7-point lead in the Lyceum poll is a relatively slender advantage.

Both candidates, among the oldest ever to run for the White House, were under intense pressure to share more medical information after Clinton fell ill.

The letter from Dr. Lisa Bardack, Clinton’s physician, notes that Clinton had a “mild” case of pneumonia and that she received a 10-day antibiotics course for the non-contagious bacterial pneumonia.

There are just 54 days to go until election day, on November 8. It also interrupted a series of speeches in which she had planned to refocus her campaign on what she would do for the country after a period when she attacked Trump as a risky, unprepared candidate.

Trump said he “noticed she was so nervous when she introduced me”.

Donald Trump is rapidly closing the gap on Hillary Clinton in a spate of new polls released Wednesday afternoon and Thursday morning, almost e Clinton’s post-convention bump and giving Democrats heartburn as the race heads into the homestretch.

The disclosure came as her Republican rival Donald Trump, 70, released health data of his own during the taping of a nationally televised medical chat show set to air yesterday.

“Mr. Trump, I invited you here to thank us for what we’ve done in Flint, not give a political speech”, Reverend Faith Green Timmons of the Bethel United Methodist Church told Trump.

She was all smiles as she entered to the James Brown song “I Feel Good”.

According to a new CBS/New York Times poll, Clinton maintains a narrow two-point lead over Trump voters nationwide, garnering 46 percent among likely voters compared to Trump’s 44 percent. She returned to the campaign trail on Thursday following a three-day absence after she almost collapsed while leaving the September 11 memorial at Ground Zero.

Hillary Clinton returned to the campaign trail on Thursday after recovering in her Westchester home from a bout of pneumonia, four days after becoming weak and dehydrated at a 9/11 memorial service. David Plouffe, then Obama’s campaign manager, said at the time that the Clinton campaign was guilty of “shameful offensive fear-mongering” by circulating a photo calling attention to Obama’s African heritage.

Trump taped a TV segment about his well-being yesterday. Otherwise, he is in “excellent physical health”.

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He said “If they were bad, I would say, let’s sort of skip this, right?”

Bennet Omalu, Hillary Clinton  and Donald Trump