#345226
Donald Trump, the billionaire businessman whose outsider campaign has both galvanized millions of voters and divided the Republican Party, is the 2016 GOP presidential nominee.
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#345227
Videos emerge online appearing to show Syrian rebels taunting and then beheading a boy they say is a captured pro-government Palestinian fighter.
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#345228
***2016 GOP Convention LiveWire*** Trump Officially Clinches GOP Nomination
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#345229
During CNN’s coverage of the Republican National Convention on America’s Choice 2016 on Monday, panelist Van Jones went off the rails and declared the whole event an unabashed “hate-fest.” “What I will say is this. Up until now, up until this moment, I was not saying borderline hate-fest. This is hate-fest,” Jones declared after his fellow panelists called him out for going beyond the pale with his description of the convention and what was being said on stage.
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#345230
We’re barely 24 hours into the Republican National Convention. Donald Trump isn’t yet the official Republican nominee for president. And already, he has managed to reinforce many of the most serious concerns about his candidacy. First there was the authoritarian and bullying way in which Trump supporters suppressed dissenters’ attempts to force a vote on party rules. Rather than allow the vote — which Trump forces would have won anyway — his backers twisted arms and played fast and loose with convention procedures. Microphones were shut off. Delegates were forced off the floor. Threats were made. It was ugly. Even in his moment of victory, Trump remains obsessed with settling scores and attacking perceived enemies. Yesterday, the Trump campaign made a point of criticizing Ohio governor John Kasich, calling him an “embarrassment” for declining to attend the convention or endorse Trump. No doubt Trump considers Kasich’s behavior disloyal. But Ohio is a vital battleground state, and not only is Kasich extremely popular in the state (his favorability ratings top 60 percent, a number Trump can only dream of), but as governor he controls much of its Republican electoral machinery. What possible advantage could there be for Trump in continuing to antagonize him? Then again, no one has gone broke overestimating Trump’s self-involvement over the last year. This is, after all, a candidate who could not be bothered to stick around for his own vice presidential choice’s remarks at the campaign’s introductory press conference last Saturday. Perhaps the most compelling speech of the convention’s first night was by Patricia Smith, the mother of Navy SEAL Sean Smith, who died at Benghazi. But some portion of the American viewing public missed hearing it because they were watching Trump, who chose to phone in an interview to Fox News while Smith spoke. POLL: Will Trump Beat Hillary? When asked whether it was a mistake for Trump to step on such a powerful message, his campaign manager, Paul Manafort, shrugged and said, “It was something Donald Trump wanted to do, so he did it.” That, more than anything else, sums up the animating logic of Trump’s campaign and his very existence. We have come to expect big egos from our politicians. We chuckle when Trump enters the convention hall amid a rock-star spectacle that puts Barack Obama’s Greek columns to shame. But Trump’s self-aggrandizement is cause for concern, since it is abundantly clear that he is not going to “surround himself with the best people,” all his protestations to the contrary. #share#Time and again, Trump’s supporters have attempted to soothe his critics by telling us that, while he may know little about the details of public policy, he will rely on smart people to fill in those gaps. So far there has been little evidence of that. Take the matter of Melania Trump’s apparently plagiarized speech last night. It is hardly the crime of the century, as some in the media are attempting to frame it. But a competent campaign would not let such a thing happen, and would have admitted its mistake and put the controversy to rest if it did happen. Instead, Trump’s campaign hunkered down and refused to take responsibility, allowing an unfortunate but minor error to dominate the news cycle. Authoritarianism, ego, incompetence, and a casual attitude toward bigotry are not really a winning formula. From the confusion and last-minute backpedaling that surrounded the choice of Indiana governor Mike Pence as running mate to its lack of campaign infrastructure in key states, Trump’s team has struggled to do the most basic work of a national campaign. It didn’t hurt them in the primaries, because it was offset by Trump’s ability to earn free publicity at the drop of a hat and the enthusiasm of his supporters. But a candidate’s handling of his campaign is a fair proxy for how he will handle the White House. And by that metric, the Trump campaign has hardly been reassuring. On top of which, there is the simple fact that Trump continues to play coy with the voices of bigotry and intolerance. When Iowa representative Steve King, a Trump surrogate, went on television yesterday to wonder whether any other “subgroup of people” has “contribute[d] to civilization” as much as whites have, he was widely and rightly condemned. The Trump campaign stayed silent. One could generously assume that they are simply distracted by the work of the convention, or by other controversies. But it can’t be denied that their silence fits a disturbing pattern of arms-length complicity. Authoritarianism, ego, incompetence, and a casual attitude toward bigotry are not really a winning formula. #related#On the other hand, the convention has also highlighted one of the biggest advantages that Trump has going for him: Hillary Clinton. As speaker after speaker has shown, Clinton’s campaign is what one might refer to as “a target-rich environment.” Her dishonesty, radicalism, and policy failures are obvious and easy to attack. At this point, polls generally show Clinton with around a four-point lead. They also show that both Clinton and Trump are among the most unpopular candidates in history. As one pollster recently summed up voter attitudes, “They hate them both.” So far, nothing we’ve seen is going to change that. — Michael Tanner is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute and the author of Going for Broke: Deficits, Debt, and the Entitlement Crisis. You can follow him on Twitter @mtannercato, or on his blog, TannerOnPolicy.com.
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#345231
CLEVELAND, OH - Yesterday, conservatives attempted to force a roll call vote on a series of rule changes that were designed to keep the RNC from maintaining an iron fist over the nomination process. They successfully got majorities of seven state delegations that were required, plus two extra for good measure. The convention chair claimed that three states had withdrawn their petitions, thus leaving the | Read More »
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#345232
“A crate of Wonder Bread isn’t as white as that Republican intern selfie Paul Ryan took," one Twitter user said.
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#345233
The GOP candidate’s pledge to bring back Glass-Steagall is an unwelcome surprise for the financial services industry.
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#345234
Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker has decided to back House Speaker Paul Ryan in his contentious primary battle against Wisconsin businessman Paul Nehlen.
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#345235
Conservatives knew this would happen.
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#345236
Milwaukee County Sheriff David Clarke launched into an impassioned speech on the importance of the rule of law and of 'trust' in police as he spoke to the Republican National Convention on Monday.
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#345237
The government has vowed that those behind Friday's failed military intervention would pay a heavy price after more than 200 people were killed.
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#345238
She has become the antithesis of a law and order presidential candidate. Here is Hillary Clinton speaking to the NAACP, and finding herself unable, or unwilling, to NOT grovel for votes and in the process, point the finger of blame at American law enforcement even as she stands in the horrible shadow of several recent …
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#345239
GQ magazine is already in the tank for Obama. Editor Jim Nelson declared him “Mount Rushmore great” in an article titled “Why Obama Will Go Down as One of the Greatest Presidents of All Time.” But GQ basketball writer Bethlehem Shoals (real name: Nathaniel Friedman) took the liberal ardor to a new low on Twitter on Monday night, after grieving Benghazi mom Patricia Smith spoke to the Republican convention.
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#345240
A “Sister Souljah Moment” refers to any politician acting against self-interest and against type.
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#345241
Mike Lee was just interviewed by Dana Bash on CNN about the roll call vote being denied by the RNC, claiming that three states dropped out of the petition. Watch: Lee says this was not an effort to…
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#345242
Melania Trump's Big Difference from Michelle Obama: American Pride
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#345243
A group called Ansar al-Khilafah Brazil has pledged allegiance to ISIS less than three weeks before the Rio Olympics are due to begin.
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#345244
Too bad she plagiarized Michelle
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#345245
Univision has established itself as a powerful and influential voice in politics. Republican candidates ignore the network at their own peril.
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#345246
The police officer bit into the sandwich at an Ohio restaurant and found glass.
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#345248
An eight-year-old girl was left fighting for her life.
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#345249
Sources said it ?seemed to be more of a friendly business meeting than a budding romance.?
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#345250
Melania Trump's speech seems to have been deliberately sabotaged
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