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Obama: White House race not a ‘reality show

Earlier this week, Mr Trump criticised US President Barrack Obama for taking sides on the Brexit row.

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The President urged the media and the American people to examine GOP presidential candidate and real estate mogul Donald Trump’s record especially.

President Barack Obama made it clear how he feels about Republican presumptive nominee Donald Trump, reminding the former “Celebrity Apprentice” host on Friday that the 2016 presidential race “is not a reality show”.

“We are in serious times and this is a really serious job”, Obama said.

Also on Friday, RNC Chairman Priebus declared that he supports Trump as the party’s nominee, even if he disagrees with some policies such as banning Muslims from entering the U.S.

Later in the day, two of Trump’s vanquished GOP rivals, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and South Carolina Sen.

“It’s along time until November and I can tell you overwhelmingly people are telling me ‘we don’t want Hillary, we are going to vote for Trump”, Republican State Senator Rick Jones of Grand Ledge stated.

Sanders writes in a letter to Democratic National Committee chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz that the makeup of the standing committees should reflect the level of support that he and Clinton received in the primaries and caucuses. “I would like to be able to do that, but I just can’t”. And what she did to a lot of those women is disgraceful. Elizabeth Warren. The Massachusetts Democrat, he said, is a “goofus” and a “basket case” who has done nothing in the Senate.

In February, Cheney criticized Trump for “sounding like a liberal Democrat” after Trump accused Cheney and George W. Bush of lying about Iraq’s possession of weapons of mass destruction.

Republican mega-donor and casino magnate Sheldon Adelson is also backing Mr Trump, saying he has clinched the nomination “fair and square”.

And despite his willingness to opine about the 2016 race, Obama said he had “no thoughts” when asked about Donald Trump’s Cinco de Mayo tweet touting his love for Hispanics by enjoying a taco bowl.

He said reporters and voters should press for details on how Trump’s campaign proposals would actually work.

“I was really surprised by it”, Trump said in a phone-interview with Fox News Channel’s “Fox & Friends”. The speaker, however, was vague about what exactly Trump would have to do to win Ryan’s support. Still, Trump assured the thousands gathered that “we’re going to be a unified party”.

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Possibly offering an olive branch, Ryan invited Trump to meet with him and fellow party leaders in the House next Thursday.

House Speaker Paul Ryan and his fellow Republicans plan to start 2016 by approving a bill to repeal Obamacare and defund Planned Parenthood. The bill is purely symbolic as there is not enough support to override President Barack Obama's awai