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Clinton says she doesn’t know ‘which’ Trump will appear at debates

“He’s an unconventional candidate, and he’s not going to prepare the way Hillary does, which is, you know, lock her in a room and cram her head with all these binders”, Kellyanne Conway, Trump’s campaign manager, said on “Fox News Sunday”. He later apologized for his comments in a Periscope livestream Monday evening.

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Hillary Clinton is rolling out a comprehensive plan to address millions of Americans coping with mental illness.

Considering how Trump’s campaign actively attacks Clinton in constantly recalling her “superpredator” remarks in the 1990s or her 2008 campaign, which was dubbed an example of “dog whistle racism”, these latest developments suggest that Clinton’s campaign is run by “people who aren’t very good at strategy, who aren’t very good at their jobs, who can’t see what’s in front of them in the political environment”, according to Sacks.

The cartoon features Clinton holding an anti-police sign – a criticism of her stance on the spate of African-Americans’ deaths that have involved police force.

To note, despite the lead reduction over the past week or two, Couvillon said, she maintains a pretty decent lead in the electoral college.

David Plouffe, a Clinton supporter and former senior adviser to President Barack Obama, agreed with the assessment of the Trump’s strength ahead of the first contest, to be held at Hofstra University in Hempstead, New York.

The cartoon also depicts Clinton as saying, “I ain’t no ways exhausted of pandering to African-Americans”.

The Clinton campaign quickly pounced and came out with a hilarious, annotated takedown of the document.

Speaking of mental health: Clinton released a plan Monday to address widespread mental health problems in the US, reports BBC News.

“The thing is this: This is why we live in a PC environment where you think one person speaks for all”.

Over the weekend, I wrote a piece breaking down Donald Trump’s remarkably poor performance among Catholics. “I am Mark Burns”, he said.

Jackson said that he will be presenting questions to Trump that are “relevant to our community, especially when it comes to economic opportunity, to jobs, and also when you look at numerous African Americans who have shot by police”.

Jackson said that he has made a “formal request” for an appearance by Clinton to her campaign but “we haven’t received a response”. “And that includes going where the voters are and taking the case directly to them in their churches”, she said.

She’s discussed systemic racial inequality on the campaign trail, campaigning at times with a group of the mothers of young African-Americans killed by police.

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Pastor Mark Burns, a supporter of Trump who met with the NY businessman last week, said: “Mr. Trump will answer questions that are relevant to the African-American community such as education, unemployment, making our streets safe and creating better opportunities for all”.

Donald Trump