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Hillary Clinton warns Trump over comment consequences

“Yesterday, we witnessed the latest in a long line of casual comments from Donald Trump that crossed the line”, she said, citing “his casual inciting of violence”.

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Pouncing on the opportunity to garner support from Republicans disenchanted with Trump, Clinton’s campaign launched Together for America, a group made for GOP defectors. When that became clear to me a week ago, I decided that I would support Hillary Clinton for president as the only person who stands in the way between the United States and Donald Trump as president, which I think would I think would be a disaster. Bongino said he thinks Trump’s Second Amendment comments were a call to get out and vote. “There is tremendous political power to save the Second Amendment, tremendous”, he said.

The Republican presidential nominee’s campaign immediately responded to the accusations, blasting “dishonest media” for misquoting Trump.

Mrs Clinton, who is leading the race for the 8 November election, told supporters Mr Trump’s remark showed he lacks the temperament to be commander-in-chief.

Among registered Republicans, another 70% said they said Trump should stay in the race, while 10% said they didn’t know.

“There has been more than one conversation” on the topic, the official said. But I’ll tell you what: “that will be a terrible day”.

The campaign released new endorsements from several retired Republican officials, including former Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez, former Housing and Urban Development Secretary Carla Hills, former Maryland Rep. Connie Morella, former Connecticut Rep. Chris Shays and former Director of National Intelligence John Negroponte.

He said, “If she gets to pick her judges, nothing you can do, folks”. But many interpreted Trump’s comments as a threat to rival Clinton.

Ms Atkinson said in a statement: “Hillary is taking a huge amount of money from companies like Costco, and when government money goes back to their suppliers, it raises serious questions about undue influence”.

A former U.S. Secret Service agent said that, in speaking to Trump’s campaign staffers, agents would have told them that “words do matter”.

Maine Sen. Susan Collins, who said Tuesday that she would not vote for either candidate, says she did not believe that Trump was encouraging violence. “I don’t like her”, said Smith, a 74-year-old retiree who lives in Clearwater, Florida.

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“I guess there’s a scenario in which this president could pick five supreme court justices, and if you pick two that are left, left, left, it’s going to be a disaster for our country”, he told supporters today.

Clinton and Trump Trade Barbs Over Economic Policy                 

     

     Reuters