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Trump Keeps Pushing Absurd Conspiracy Theories About Obama and ISIS

Earlier, Trump had proposed banning all Muslims from entering the country, but, in the new circumstance where more people, especially women are dissociating with him, he might tame his words a bit.

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Indiana Governor Mike Pence said Donald Trump was being “serious” when he said that U.S. President Barack Obama was the “founder” of IS.

That looked bad until Bloomberg Politics pollster Ann Selzer asked them about Trump.

Asked why she couldn’t support the Democratic Party, Stein argued that they have “sabotaged” Sen.

“The only way they can beat it, in my opinion – and I mean this 100% – if in certain sections of the state, they cheat”, he said. “I mean, give me a break”.

Mr Trump’s exercise in self-awareness is a marked departure from his usual tenor on the campaign trail, where for months at rallies he would tick through poll numbers showing him winning.

Biden also slammed Trump’s statement that President Barack Obama founded ISIS as “outrageous” and “dangerous”, pointing to the head of the Hezbollah terrorist organization picking up on those comments. Clinton’s approval rating is only 16 percent.

Data released on Thursday has 46 percent of likely voters across Texas casting their ballots for the divisive Republican candidate, if the election were held today. One exception came this month when he acknowledged a video he said showed a plane carrying US cash to Iran was actually a plane carrying USA hostages who were being released.

Former President Bill Clinton will join Libertarian and Green Party candidates at a presidential forum on the Las Vegas Strip.

In her book, Hard Choices, Clinton blamed the spread of the rumors on “some unusually irresponsible and demagogic right-wing political and media personalities in the United States, including members of Congress”, according to the Times.

Clinton’s campaign also released 10 years of returns from running mate Tim Kaine and his wife, Anne Holton.

Star of David: In July, Trumps campaign tweeted an anti-Clinton message that seemed to show the Star of David atop a pile of cash, raising questions about anti-Semitism.

He noted that Trump had visited key battleground states such as Pennsylvania, Ohio and Florida repeatedly and was “starting to get traction in those states”.

Dominating news last week were Trump’s remark that Second Amendment backers could “do something” if Hillary Clinton is elected president and appoints liberal judges.

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Republican vice presidential candidate Mike Pence, in an interview taped on August 12 and broadcast Sunday on Fox News, said Trump hadn’t been joking.

Republican nominee Donald Trump and running mate Gov. Mike Pence R-Ind. appear in July in Roanoke Va