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Trump goes on tear against media, not Clinton

Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Kaine on Saturday compared Trump to Nixon-a president “not known for the most elevated ethical standards”-who eventually released his returns, because “he said.the American public have a right to see my tax returns.They should see who I have connections with, they should see if I am paying the taxes that support our veterans, that support our military, that support our social services”.

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However, Pence believes the blame lies exclusively at the feet of the current administration.

Trump’s running mate, Indiana Gov. Mike Pence, suggested Saturday he may release his tax returns before the election in November, a move that would put him at odds with Trump, who has refused to make public any information about the taxes he and his companies have paid.

Tapper pointed out that it wasn’t just the news media that questioned Trump’s claims about gun owners and Clinton, but also fellow Republicans and Trump supporters.

Reason magazineAccording to a new USA Today/Rock The Vote survey of millennials, voters under the age of 35 really dislike the Republican Party and its presidential nominee, Donald Trump. Susan Collins of ME last week became the seventh Senate Republican to break with Trump over his combative anti-Muslim and anti-immigrant rhetoric.

Seventy-one percent of Florida voters polled said they don’t think Trump has a good temperament or judgment.

“These things, just because you say them, they’re not – they’re not true”, Tapper said.

At a campaign rally in Connecticut, Republican Donald Trump on Saturday repeated his attack on President Barack Obama that he helped “found” the Islamic State and railed against media reports that his campaign is failing.

Jeremy Bird, who ran field operations for Obama’s 2012 campaign and is now consulting for Clinton’s operation, said Trump has no one to blame but himself.

“It was not meant at all to be a threat”, Manafort said.

Trump seemed particularly upset with a New York Times article that quotes unnamed associates of his as saying that in private “his mood is often sullen and erratic”. He said he understands that “people in the establishment” may have “anxiety about the clear-eyed leadership” Trump will bring. News shows the former Secretary of State with the biggest margin – 10 points – over the GOP nominee; the LA Times/University of Southern California has them separated by only 4 points.

Republican Donald Trump will declare an end to nation building if elected president, replacing it with what aides described as “foreign policy realism” focused on destroying the Islamic State group and other terrorist organizations. “I have to think this proves the candidate is running the campaign, which explains why it’s such a disaster of biblical proportions”.

A representative of The Times said the editors fully stand by the story.

When asked by host Brian Stelter whether the campaign plans to lift the ban on media outlets, Miller said, “We want to see honest and unbiased reporting”. Pence had a different take.

Trump, again on Sunday, tweeted his disdain for the media. “They never discuss the real message and never show crowd size or enthusiasm”.

Mr Pence said on Fox News that he remains proud to be Mr Trump’s running mate and advised: “Stay tuned, it’s very early in this campaign”.

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To emphasize the statement he made Saturday at the rally in Fairfield, Connecticut, about the “crooked media”, the 70-year-old real estate tycoon waved his finger in a horizontal line toward where the press was stationed.

Mike Pence