Melania Trump pledges to fight cyberbullies – after election
Melania Trump doesn’t have very much experience with public speaking.
Melania Trump doesn’t have very much experience with public speaking.
It is down to the wire in the Sunshine State.
One of Donald Trump’s prominent Jewish supporters on Thursday accused Hillary Clinton of being anti-Semitic, cursing out Jews in private conversations.
With seven days left to the end of one of the rockiest and ugliest presidential campaigns in the history of the U.S., public opinion polls are indicating an extremely tight race with Donald Trump gaining rapidly on Hillary Clinton.
The Trump campaign on Sunday strongly condemned an anti-Semitic supporter who yelled “Jew-S-A” at reporters during a Trump rally in Arizona on Saturday, calling it “disgusting” and “completely unacceptable.”
Sen. Charles Schumer (D-NY) on Sunday pointed to his opposition to the Iran nuclear deal as proof that he will not serve as a rubber stamp to a possible President Hillary Clinton if elected as the Senate Majority Leader next year.
Like many of his controversial comments in the past, Donald Trump stepped on his toes by hesitating to say that he would accept the outcome of the Nov. 8 election, former vice presidential candidate Joseph Lieberman said on Thursday.
The campaign of Sen. Marco Rubio (R – Florida) is set to announce on Thursday its “Jewish Leadership Coalition,” a group of 150 Republican and Democratic Jewish community leaders supporting the Florida senator’s re-election bid, according to a list obtained by Jewish Insider.
Haim Saban, a staunch supporter of both President Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, urged the former Secretary of State distance herself from the president on Israel out of concern that Marco Rubio – seen at the time as a favorite to emerge as the Republican nominee – would get a greater share of the Jewish vote in battleground states, newly released emails show.
J Street, likely to emerge after the 2016 election as a major force within the Democratic Party, is expecting from Senator Chuck Schumer to fall in line with supporters of the Iranian nuclear deal once he assumes leadership of the Democratic Caucus in the U.S. Senate.