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Donald Trump: ‘Very Happy’ to ‘Self-Fund’ General Election Campaign

An official at Free the Delegates said the group has a CT representative, but was unable to produce such a person Monday or Tuesday.

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Trump’s highly polarizing statements on immigration were also fodder for Clinton to poach during the speech on economics.

His sterling business credentials? “He’s written a lot of books about his businesses”.

Clinton piled on in her speech in OH, an important swing state, where she argued that Trump’s lack of a plan to bring back manufacturing and other jobs could yank the nation back into recession.

Clinton made her economic case against Trump in OH, the quintessential swing-state.

Donald Trump’s way of doing business is not to pay his bills.

Clinton didn’t just give a speech. They find Clinton more inspiring than Trump, although they find Trump a slightly stronger leader.

That would include banning Muslims from entry in the United States, castigating Mexicans, negotiating a default on USA debt, which would precipitate a global economic collapse, that kind of thing. She also repeated a comment he made that pregnant employees are an “inconvenience”. “If (Trump) is not presenting that, then someone needs to call him out on it”, Whaling said. Suggesting the United States could default on its debt could cause a “global panic”, she adds.

The latest clash comes amid revelations that Trump’s campaign war chest lags woefully behind Clinton’s.

“Donald Trump actually stood on a debate stage in November and said that wages are too high in this country”. By comparison, four years earlier, GOP nominee Mitt Romney helped the RNC bring in $34 million.

Clinton said Trump’s plan to build a wall along the U.S. -Mexico border and deport undocumented immigrants would shake the workforce and prove disastrous for the U.S. economy, creating a “Trump recession”.

Disclosure: Donald Trump is the father-in-law of Jared Kushner, the publisher of Observer Media.

They say that activity will be reflected in the campaign’s next federal fundraising report.

Trump donors, allies and other Republican operatives have expressed concerns about his campaign operation, which has been dogged by internal battles, threadbare infrastructure of about 30 paid staff and a barely existent fund-raising apparatus.

Trump is facing a serious fundraising disadvantage against likely Democratic rival Hillary Clinton. He started June with $9.2 million in cash, which was better than he did in April, when he ended the month with only $5.7 million on hand.

Some of that group’s biggest contributors include billionaire financier Donald Sussman of NY, who gave $2 million, and Chicago media billionaire Fred Eychaner, who gave $3 million. That’s fine, but individual members of Congress aren’t bound by party rules (sorry, Scott and Curly) the way delegates are to support the candidate who won their state’s primary.

His campaign began June with $1.3 million in the bank, compared with the $42 million presumptive Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton had amassed.

“This is the first fundraising email I have ever sent on behalf of my campaign”, Trump wrote. As such, the subject line reads: “The first one”.

By comparison, Red Bank Republicans raised between $10,000 to $11,000 in May for their races, said Sean DiSomma, chairman of the Red Bank Republican Party.

As part on an onslaught of on-air television ads, the campaign also released a new web video that lists failed ventures from Trump Mortgage to Trump steaks and vodka.

By laying into Trump’s corporate empire, Clinton aimed to disarm her rival’s potent claim that he can translate his business acumen into Oval Office success.

– Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump)Obama-Clinton inherited $10T in debt and turned it into almost $20T.

Clinton’s remarks also provided a window into the future when a running mate joins her on the trail as an economic attack dog. The aide spoke on condition of anonymity because the aide was not authorized to describe the meeting publicly.

By our count, Clinton used about 75 percent of her words to attack the economic ideas and proposals from the presumptive Republican nominee.

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Clinton’s reception from congressional Democrats has been far warmer than the decidedly mixed relationship that Trump has had with Republicans in Congress.

The presidency of either Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump may “launch World War III,” said Don DeBar an author and radio host in New York City