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Former Michigan Republican Gov. Milliken endorses Clinton

Trump also will propose stronger protections for American intellectual property and a temporary moratorium on new regulations, the aide said.

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Tickets were sold exclusively to Detroit Economic Club members – typically area business people – and their guests.

Trump will take direct aim at the Clintons and Obama, pointing to Detroit as an example of their failed economic policies.

He also denigrated the family of a Muslim-American soldier killed in the Iraq war, to the horror of veterans and their supporters.

A raft of new polls out this week carried nearly unanimously good news for Hillary Clinton, staking the Democratic presidential nominee to significant leads over Donald Trump.

William Milliken, a Republican who in recent years has increasingly backed Democrats, is endorsing Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton for president. With Libertarian Party nominee Gary Johnson and Green Party nominee Jill Stein added to the race, Clinton maintains her 8-point lead, 45% to Trump’s 37%, Johnson’s 8% and Stein’s 4%.

Texas investor Doug Deason, who backed Ted Cruz for president in the primary, said he’d like to see Trump “lay out a plan to lower corporate taxes, eliminate federal bureaucracy costs by 10 percent or more, end all corporate welfare programs, convert welfare programs to work programs and dramatically reduce all of the silly federal rules the current administration has put in place”. The Democratic nominee is instead programming her Global Positioning System to take her on the quickest route to collect the 270 Electoral College votes she needs to win the White House.

“But that’s not to say the way we vote in OH and elsewhere is problem-free”.

The Clinton campaign fired off a blast against the Trump plan Monday morning before his speech, arguing that it was rooted in big tax breaks for corporations and businesses and would likely lead to a recession. “OH is a place where it is easy to vote and hard to cheat”.

Gov. John Kasich, says, “Thought it was a little freaky”.

What he said: “I wish that I could be fully enthusiastic”.

“She made a mistake, and she said over and over again, ‘I made a mistake, and I’ve learned from it, and I’m going to fix it, and I apologise for it, ‘” Kaine said.

“There’s so much water over the dam now, it’s become increasingly hard”. “To me, the choice is clear”. Calley also recently stumped for Indiana Gov. Mike Pence, Trump’s vice presidential running mate, when Pence was in Grand Rapids on July 28.

“I want to jump-start America and it can be done and it won’t even be that hard”, Trump said today. The stop was not publicly announced but word got around. She also has two rallies scheduled in Florida Monday.

Feeling good about Colorado and Virginia, the campaign passed on giving those states a fresh injection of ad dollars, though they remain heavily staffed with organizers. Bilingual teams of Clinton employees are registering first-time Puerto Rican voters at grocery stores, malls and community centers.

The expensive Senate campaign: “With about three months to go before Election Day, Ohio’s U.S. Senate race is shaping up to be the most expensive in the state’s history”, cleveland.com’s Jeremy Pelzer writes.

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“There’s an increased urgency among Hispanics to vote, and if they do, it will be a changed ballgame here”, Flake said.

Donald Trump is set to zero in on rival Hillary Clinton with a speech on his economic plans