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In about-face, Cruz says he’ll vote for Trump

On Tuesday, Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah al-Sissi, also in NY for the UN’s annual gathering, held two seperate meetings with Clinton and Trump.

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Kaine said that “casting a vote, a protest vote for a third-party candidate that’s going to lose may well affect the outcome, and may well lead to a effect that is deeply, deeply troubling”.

The relationship between Cruz and Trump during the 2016 campaign season can only be described as tumultuous at best as the pair traded colossal jabs with one another as they faced off for the GOP presidential nomination. But he’s gotten close enough so it can make you nervous.

In return, Cruz tweeted out his thanks to Trump. At others, he’s said the people he would nominate would share similar qualities to those on the list.

Netanyahu met with President Barack Obama on Wednesday in what was likely their last face-to-face consultation.

Obama was disputing the Republican presidential candidate’s assertion that “African-American communities are absolutely in the worst shape that they have ever been in before”.

He’s viewed more unfavorably than favorably by a 61 per cent to 34 per cent margin, and more say their unfavorable opinion of the New Yorker is a strong one than say the same of Clinton, 50 per cent to 44 per cent.

Clinton’s campaign announced late Friday that she would postpone a visit to the city after having announced that she would go to Charlotte on Sunday.

Less than a third say they would be excited or proud should she move into the White House. Most refused to accept jobs with the Trump campaign when offered following Cruz’s departure from the primary campaign this spring. (A few of us up in Canada may be feeling the same way.) While planning a debate-watching party, some might also be preparing for the debate itself and might be wondering what presidential debate questions will be asked.

While Clinton has been relentlessly challenged about her honesty, Trump was the primary propagator of arguably the biggest lie of the past eight years: that Obama wasn’t born in the United States.

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In addition to Pennsylvania, this commercial will air in Florida, Iowa, Nevada, New Hampshire, North Carolina and Ohio. The vast majority of calls coming into Cruz’s office had turned increasingly negative in recent weeks with many voters urging him to support Trump to prevent a Clinton victory, according to Republicans familiar with the situation. Clinton has talked about building bridges, not walls, and has a plan to keep immigrant families together with a path to citizenship.

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