Keyword: presidential
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Headline of the Day Poll Who do you predict will win the election? Hillary in a landslide Hillary in a close election Trump in a close election Trump in a landslide Poll Location: http://www.headlineoftheday.com
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Headline of the Day Poll Weekend Presidential Poll: Who is your choice for President? Hillary Clinton Donald Trump Poll location: http://www.headlineoftheday.com/#ixzz4OWaFZQDm
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CLINTON: So what I am proposing is that we invest from the middle out and the ground up, not the top down. CLINTON: We’ll have what economists call middle-out growth.
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Donald Trump’s presidential campaign is finally spending more money than Hillary Clinton’s. Trump’s campaign will spend almost $11.7 million on television ads set to run in eleven states this week, topping Clinton’s spending on ads for the first time. The Clinton campaign is spending $10.5 million on advertising in seven states.
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Headline of the Day Poll Who won the Presidential Debate? Donald Trump (51%) Hillary Clinton (49%) Vote
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Headline of the Day Poll Who won the VP Debate? Senator Tim Kaine (50%) Gov. Mike Pence (45%) It was a tie (5%)
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You can elect not to agree with my conclusion, but if this election is stolen from Donald Trump, the utter collapse of America will be almost immediate. If Donald Trump wins (as he certainly should), and if the Lord tarries, the collapse of America will be stalled for perhaps another 15-20 years barring another world war Hillary Clinton and Erebusic neo-cons are committed to starting. Our system of jurisprudence is supposed to protect us from the incestuous camorra guilty of duplicitous machinations; instead the legal system and specifically the federal system works to protect the most egregious criminal offenders ever...
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This is a video of Sunday Mass at Ss Simon & Jude, Roman Catholic Cathedral of Phoenix. The homily in which Fr. John Lankeit discusses the election begins at 18:24.
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Since both candidates in Tuesday night’s vice presidential debate have a record when it comes to religious liberty, you can bet the topic will come up—giving you the opportunity to talk with the people in your life about a deeply important issue. Unsurprisingly, religious liberty is a tricky topic to navigate because it’s personal. People feel strongly about the ability to live life as they want, but some betray the concept of tolerance by crying “intolerant!” if others want to live life through the lens of their faith. So, how do you talk about religious liberty with someone who thinks...
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The first presidential debate between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump was a major event and with that, there is pressure to appear to be informed. So we went out on the street during the afternoon before the debate and asked people what they thought of the debate 'last night.' The debate hadn't even occurred yet, but that did not stop them in this special debate edition of #LieWitnessNews.
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Presidential Memorandum -- Climate Change and National Security | whitehouse.gov https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2016/09/21/presidential-memorandum-climate-change-and-national-security The White House Office of the Press Secretary For Immediate Release September 21, 2016 Presidential Memorandum -- Climate Change and National Security September 21, 2016 MEMORANDUM FOR THE HEADS OF EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENTS AND AGENCIES SUBJECT: Climate Change and National Security By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, I hereby direct the following: Section 1. Purpose. This memorandum establishes a framework and directs Federal departments and agencies (agencies) to perform certain functions to ensure that climate change-related...
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The Second Presidential Debate Will Try Something New Ordinary Americans will be able to submit—and vote on—questions to be considered when the candidates meet again. Viewers unhappy with the questions asked at Monday night’s debate will have a shot to weigh in before Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton meet again on October 9: For the first time, the networks producing the town-hall style debate have agreed to accept questions voted on through the internet. The Commission on Presidential Debates had already announced that the second of three debates would feature questions submitted online in addition to those asked by the...
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Headline of the Day Poll Who won the debate? Hillary Clinton (57%) Donald Trump (43%) Vote Read more: http://www.headlineoftheday.com/#ixzz4LQ3fXfwL
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For over a year now, the mainstream press has attacked Trump for not being "presidential". Even still, citizens are genuinely concerned that their president look the part of a president and carry themselves in a way that makes us proud. So what exactly is meant when someone says a candidate looks or is "presidential"? And why should we care? This is the subject I'm going to explore and discuss in this vanity. JFK, Jackie and the Royalty of Camelot Well, to begin, I think our current notion of a "presidential" style was strongly influenced by JFK in the 1960s. ...
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"Looking back I know I should have followed my doctors orders to test, but my instinct was to push through it," Clinton said at the Black Women's Agenda forum. "That is what women do every day."
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The Commission on Presidential Debates has made its decision on who will be presiding over the 2016 face-offs between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton. The debate on September 26 will be moderated by Lester Holt of NBC. Anderson Cooper of CNN and Martha Raddatz of ABC will co-moderate the second debate on October 9. Finally, Fox anchor Chris Wallace will host the third debate on October 19.
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Hillary's whole plan: Shift the subject. Ignore the facts. Name call. Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign has resorted to S.I.N. on steroids! What’s that, you ask? Shift the subject. Ignore the facts. Name call. Hillary does not want to answer questions about the Clinton Foundation, the e-mail scandal, Benghazi, the economy or ObamaCare, so she keeps her press conferences to a minimum. Even members of her adoring news corps get candy treats instead of answers from Hillary.
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(CNN)It's the most deceptive sign in politics. Every four years, a presidential candidate gazes out over a vast crowd and convinces themselves the White House is there for the taking. In 2016, the general election candidate drawing the biggest and loudest crowds is Donald Trump. "We got to Oklahoma, we have 25,000 people. We had 21,000 people in Dallas, we had 35,000 people in Mobile, Alabama. We get these massive crowds," Trump said in Florida earlier this month. "Look, if she had 500 people I would be surprised," he added, poking fun at Hillary Clinton's more intimate events.During the primaries,...
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Stay focused Presidential campaigns have very high points, very low points and lots of slogging in between. I can certainly tell you about that. And the past week saw more than a few rough spots for Donald Trump, whose failure to be measured in the things he said gave his media enemies the perfect excuse to paint him as erratic and out of control. And as Rob told you on Wednesday, this led to media speculation that the Republican Party might be discussing a Plan B in the event Trump himself decided to drop out of the race.
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So much time between now and then.
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