Share

Pence could hold back Trump’s Wall Street fundraising

A Wisconsin law enforcement official said Thursday he doesn’t know why a Washington Post reporter was kicked out of a Wednesday night campaign rally near Milwaukee for Republican vice presidential nominee Mike Pence, but stressed it wasn’t his department that removed him.

Advertisement

Pence says he’s honored to join Trump’s ticket, echoing his running mate’s message.

He tried to change that Friday during his first speech in MI since he was announced as Trump’s running mate.

Obama, however, took the schoolyard taunting too far for Pence, using his speech at the Democratic National Convention to lump the billionaire Trump in with threats to the USA including Islamist radicals.

Pence was set to campaign in the heart of conservative Wisconsin, a three-county region considered the epicenter of the state’s never-Trump movement, which Trump lost to rival Ted Cruz by a whopping 40 points.

And he blasted President Barack Obama for appearing to call Trump a “homegrown demagogue” Wednesday night, saying there’s no room for “name-calling” in American politics.

However, there are some signs Pence may not provide Trump a bridge to the corporate world and Wall Street, which have both so far been hesitant to fully embrace Trump compared to 2012 Republican nominee Mitt Romney. Pence sat down with Hewitt this morning, where the radio host pointed out that suppressing the press is “not in the American tradition”. “I am a firm believer Donald is exactly what we need and we are thrilled to have him here in our city with us today”.

Goren says in order for Trump to win the presidency, he needs rust belt states such as Wisconsin, and she says it’s no different for Democrats.

A short time later, officials say, DelReal came in through the general admission door and he was stopped by the event staff.

” “Our founders did not put the freedom of the press in the First Amendment because they got good press – quite the opposite was true, ‘ he says”. The matter is being looking into by Pence officials.

Advertisement

“To be around Trump is to be around a man with broad shoulders, who speaks his mind, who doesn’t tip toe around rules of political correctness”. “I imagine that at some point the person was inspired or prompted by past exclusions of Washington Post reporters who were doing the job and revealing uncomfortable truths about the candidate”.

Pence heads to Wisconsin to woo wary Republicans