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Obama Says It’s An ‘Insult’ If Black Voters Don’t Support Clinton

“Take their guns away, she doesn’t want guns”. Trump has had a very, very good September.

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Trump’s meaning was not immediately clear and a campaign spokeswoman did not immediately respond to a request for an elaboration.

But the Clinton campaign had a quick reaction. That’s utterly preposterous, as is trying to coerce your own party members into voting for an old, sick, dishonest, and untrustworthy candidate, who won’t be able to get anything done due to her political baggage. This marked a very rare occasion in US history that a presidential candidate has attacked an opponent’s supporters rather than the opponent.

Kaine condemned Trump in an interview with Chris Wallace on “Fox News Sunday”.

Todd pointed out that Trump had continued to push the birther falsehood “when he was running for president”.

But second, this notion that he has done before, look, if Hillary gets elected then maybe Second Amendment people will have to take care of the situation, or his comment Friday night, or his statements in rallies.

With close numbers in recent polling, Clinton may rely on Pennsylvania to give her a bigger shot at presidency.

However, Kaine said, others can be won over – pointing to progress in his home state of Virginia, which when he was born still had segregated schools and wouldn’t let women into the University of Virginia.

The current commander in chief criticized what many refer to as Trump’s fear tactics to gain support from certain groups of voters.

The comments Friday in Miami came hours after Trump finally reversed his long-held position that President Barack Obama was not born in the United States.

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who’s heading up Trump’s transition team and has long said Obama was born in the USA, insisted on CNN that “the birther issue is a done issue”.

Obama also tore into Trump’s presidential campaign, describing it as an “infomercial” and “reality show”.

The Clinton campaign reacted quickly, with spokesman Robby Mook saying Mr Trump “has a pattern of inciting people to violence”. Less widely reported are the comments that immediately followed, in which she characterized other Trump supporters more kindly, as “people who feel that the government has let them down, the economy has let them down … and they’re just desperate for change….” Retiring Rep. Charles Rangel, D-N.Y., who was honored for his service, said of the GOP nominee, “His hatred and his bigotry has pulled the rug off and the sheet off the Republican Party so we can see it for what it is”.

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ABC News, together with our partners at SSRS survey research firm, asked Americans how important it is for candidates to release their health records and about the impact of candidates’ overall health and fitness on their vote.

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