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Trump running mate Pence to speak in Charlotte on Wednesday
Donald Trump’s running mate, Mike Pence, sought to clarify the Republican nominee’ position on undocumented immigration on Wednesday, saying people should “stay tuned” for Trump to outline his policy but that it would reflect “compassion and humanity”.
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“The road to the White House goes right through North Carolina”, Pence said.
His last visit to the Tar Heel state was August 5 when he held a town hall in the Triangle.
Pence was an outspoken supporter of deals such at the North American Free Trade Agreement, which he voted for in Congress and has said helped the economy in his home state in, where he is now governor. He said that was highlighted recently by revelations in Clinton’s use of private emails during her time as secretary of state that staffers helped secure meetings with Clinton for donors to the Clinton Foundation.
An NBC-Wall Street Journal-Marist Poll released this month put the Democratic ticket of Hillary Clinton and Tim Kaine 9 points ahead of Trump-Pence in North Carolina. She has contrasted Trump with former Republican presidential candidates John McCain, Bob Dole and former President George W. Bush, praising their decisive steps to counter racial bias and anti-Muslim sentiment.
A majority of millennials said they doubted Trump’s ability to keep the US safe from terrorism and to make the right decisions about the economy, while a majority of millennials said they trust Clinton to do both.
INDIANAPOLIS -The Indiana branch of the Trump-Pence campaign will mobilize over the next few weeks in an effort to ensure Indiana won’t be in play for Hillary Clinton this November. Trump’s mission to discredit the citizenship of America’s first black president by demanding to see Obama’s birth certificate was just a preview of a long line of racist rants that followed.
Ian Simon, 20, completed his shift at the company before returning to show his support for the GOP nominee, whom he called an outsider who “says it how it is”.
“The defacto merger between Breitbart and the Trump campaign represents a landmark achievement for the “alt-right” Clinton said. “(Trump) said ‘Mike, it’s going to be great'”.
He also asserted that Clinton’s statement at a congressional hearing, when she asked what difference did it make as to what inspired the terrorists, was “disqualifying”.
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Businesses watching the sharp trade critiques of Mr. Trump and, increasingly, Democratic rival Hillary Clinton, see a rising threat to their interests. “We need to think about what that means for the God-given liberties that are enshrined in our Constitution and our founding documents”, he said. (Seventy percent think he is not qualified.) And an overwhelming majority of millennial respondents said the way Trump talks appeals to bigotry.