Tuesday, 7 June 2016

Politics: Sanders plans to ‘assess’ presidential bid at home in Vermont after Tuesday contests

Will there be enough white voters to elect Donald Trump?; Ryan to unveil anti-poverty proposal as part of election-year policy agenda; AP: Clinton clinches the nomination, becoming first woman to top a major party ticket; Many Trump supporters don't believe his wildest promises — and they don't care; Sorry, Donald Trump, the Trump University judge was just following the law; In San Francisco, Berniecrats lash out at press for calling nomination for Clinton; Trump: I ‘broke the glass ceiling on behalf of women’ in construction industry; The Daily Trail: Hillary Clinton hits the magic number; Trump increasingly alone in defending his racial attacks on Latino federal judge; The meaning of Hillary, and the long, hard climb to the top of the ticket; AP: Clinton secures enough delegates to become first woman to top a major-party ticket; Clinton reaches number of delegates needed to clinch Democratic nomination, AP finds; Rand Paul’s tribute to Muhammad Ali: Trying to end Selective Service; Ryan to unveil anti-poverty proposal as part of election-year policy agenda;
 
Politics
The most important politics stories today
 
 
Sanders plans to 'assess' presidential bid at home in Vermont after Tuesday contests
But Bernie Sanders made clear that he is far from ready to cede the nomination to Hillary Clinton, who picked up more delegates over the weekend and leads among both super delegates and pledged delegates.
Will there be enough white voters to elect Donald Trump?
donald trump, white voters, latino vote, hispanic, stu rothenberg, stuart rothenberg
 
Ryan to unveil anti-poverty proposal as part of election-year policy agenda
The lack of specific policy prescriptions may open Ryan up to criticism from the left, but it also reduces the risk that any of the proposals could be rejected by Donald Trump who has said very little about specific anti-poverty measures.
AP: Clinton clinches the nomination, becoming first woman to top a major party ticket
A long and bitter primary fight has come to an end after Clinton won enough delegates to claim the nomination at the convention in July.
 
ADVERTISEMENT
 
Many Trump supporters don't believe his wildest promises — and they don't care
Voters often say they don't expect him to actually build a wall or deport millions.
 
Sorry, Donald Trump, the Trump University judge was just following the law
Trump earns Four Pinocchios for blaming Judge Gonzalo Curiel's decision on whether to resolve the Trump University lawsuit on summary judgment.
 
In San Francisco, Berniecrats lash out at press for calling nomination for Clinton
Unbridled fury about the media and the Democratic establishment rippled through a crowd of Bernie Sanders supporters in San Francisco.
 
Trump: I ‘broke the glass ceiling on behalf of women’ in construction industry
Trump's comments were immediately mocked on social media.
 
 
The Daily Trail: Hillary Clinton hits the magic number
And Trump reportedly tells supporters to call reporters racist, because 2016.
 
Trump increasingly alone in defending his racial attacks on Latino federal judge
GOP lawmakers scurry for cover, though many still plan to support Trump in November.
 
The meaning of Hillary, and the long, hard climb to the top of the ticket
The first woman to lead a major party ticket in this country made history by pushing the edge, bit by bit.
 
AP: Clinton secures enough delegates to become first woman to top a major-party ticket
A long and bitter primary fight has come to an end after Clinton won enough delegates to claim the nomination at the convention in July.
 
ADVERTISEMENT
 
Clinton reaches number of delegates needed to clinch Democratic nomination, AP finds
According to an Associated Press count, Hillary Clinton will become the first woman to top the presidential ticket of a major U.S. political party, capturing commitments Monday from the number of delegates needed to become the Democrats' presumptive nominee. This is a developing story. It will be updated.
Rand Paul’s tribute to Muhammad Ali: Trying to end Selective Service
The senator said he'd be introducing legislation to end the program that replaced the military draft.
 
Ryan to unveil anti-poverty proposal as part of election-year policy agenda
The lack of specific policy prescriptions may open Ryan up to criticism from the left, but it also reduces the risk that any of the proposals could be rejected by Donald Trump who has said very little about specific anti-poverty measures.
Recommended for you
 
The Daily Trail
An evening rundown of what's happening on the campaign trail.
Sign Up »
 
     
 
©2016 The Washington Post, 1301 K St NW, Washington DC 20071
 
 
 

No comments:

Post a Comment