Tag: Hillary Clinton

  • Donald Trump Lauds Hindu Community’s ‘Fantastic’ Contributions To US

    Donald Trump Lauds Hindu Community’s ‘Fantastic’ Contributions To US

    Washington: US’ Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has praised Hindu community’s “fantastic” contributions to world civilisation and American culture.

    Mr Trump, 70, also confirmed that he would be addressing an Indian-American event in New Jersey next month, the proceeds of which will benefit global victims of terror.

    “The Hindu community has made fantastic contributions to world civilisation and to American culture, and we look forward to celebrating our shared values of free enterprise, hard work, family values, and a strong American foreign policy,” Mr Trump said in a statement.

    He issued a short 24-second video message inviting Indian-Americans to attend the “incredible” event on October 15.

    “Hello everyone, it is my pleasure to invite you to a Republican Hindu Coalition rally at the PNC Arts Center in New Jersey. I am very much looking forward to speaking to thousands of Indian-Americans and others about making America great again. I look forward to seeing everybody there. It would be an incredible evening,” Mr Trump said in his video message.

    According to the Trump Campaign, the all-day event brings together top actors, dancers, and singers from Bollywood, Hindu spiritual and civic leaders for a celebration of Hindu culture and heritage.

    “The proceeds of the event will benefit global victims of Islamic terror,” the campaign said, adding that the event christened ‘Humanity United Against Terror’ has been organised by Republican Hindu Coalition, which is founded and headed by Indian-American Shalli Kumar from Illinois.

    “I am looking forward to joining my good friend Shalli Kumar, founder and chairman of the Republican Hindu Coalition for this terrific event,” Mr Trump said in an accompanying statement issued by his campaign.

    Mr Kumar, who on Sunday was appointed by Donald Trump to his advisory committee for people from Asia Pacific region, said he expects some 10,000 people to turn out for the event.

    This is for the first time in the last two presidential elections that a presidential has confirmed to attend a public Indian-American event.

    Mr Trump’s decision is seen as an attempt to woo the Indian-American community who can play a key role in some of the battle ground States like Virginia if the race is close.

    Hillary Clinton, the Democratic presidential nominee, has held and attended a series of fund raisers organised by Indian-Americans across the country including at their homes.

    But those are all closed door events away from public glare.

    Ms Clinton, 68, often called as Senator from Punjab, and has a large following among the Indian-Americans is yet to make any public appearance before the community.

    But she has appointed a large number of Indian-Americans in her campaign team.

    A recent Pew Survey had said that Indian-Americans overwhelmingly vote for Democrats.

  • Bruce Springsteen on Donald Trump: ‘The republic is under siege by a moron’

    Bruce Springsteen on Donald Trump: ‘The republic is under siege by a moron’

    In previous presidential elections, Bruce Springsteen was not shy about sharing his views.

    The musician penned a New York Times op-ed in August 2004 detailing why he’d be voting for John Kerry that November, and in 2012 he voiced his support for President Barack Obama. Now, with the 2016 election nearly upon us, he opened up to Rolling Stone about his thoughts on the current political climate.

    So how does Springsteen feel about Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump?

    “Well, you know, the republic is under siege by a moron, basically. The whole thing is tragic. Without overstating it, it’s a tragedy for our democracy.”

    He went on to discuss the elements of Trump’s platform he deems most dangerous — “white nationalism and the alt-right movement” — before speculating on what he thinks is the candidate’s appeal to voters.

    “And Trump’s thing is simple answers to very complex problems. Fallacious answers to very complex problems. And that can be very appealing.”

    As for his thoughts on Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, Springsteen kept it simple: “I like Hillary. I think she would be a very, very good president.”

  • Hillary Clinton Wins First Presidential Debate, 62% to 27%

    Hillary Clinton Wins First Presidential Debate, 62% to 27%

    Democrat Hillary Clinton on Tuesday defeated Republican Donald Trump in the first presidential debate by 62% to 27%.

    Earlier, Clinton and Trump took to the stage on Monday to begin their first-ever presidential debate and have immediately sparred over jobs, taxes, the Islamic State, guns and the former secretary of state’s undisclosed emails, media reports said.

    Moderator Leslie Holt of NBC News opened the 90-minute debate at Hofstra University, Long Island, New York, with the first topic, “Achieving Prosperity” where the first question about putting money back into Americans’ pockets and creating jobs was directed to Clinton, CNN reported.

    Clinton, the first woman to represent a major US party in the presidential race, mentioned her granddaughter’s birthday, and talked about everything from gender pay gaps, to paid family leave, to presidential temperament.

    Trump gave a classic answer about China and Mexico stealing American business and jobs.

    “We have to stop our jobs from being stolen from us, we have to stop companies from leaving the United States,” he added.

    Clinton also called on Trump to apologise to people who have worked on the real estate mogul’s properties who have not been paid in full, Politico reported.

    Do “the thousands of people that you have stiffed over the course of your business not deserve some kind of apology from someone who has taken their labour, taken the goods that they’ve produced and then refused to pay them?” Clinton questioned her rival.

    “I can only say that I’m certainly relieved that my late father never did business with you.”

    Trump went on to suggest that he had only taken that route four times, and that he was within his legal rights to do so.

    Following Trump’s opening remarks about reducing taxes, Holt asked Clinton to defend her plan to increase taxes.

    Clinton quipped she has a feeling she will be blamed for everything by the end of the night.

    Regarding taxes, Trump said “I will release my tax returns – against my lawyer’s wishes – when she releases her 33,000 emails that have been deleted.”

    Clinton responded by saying that there was something “really important, maybe even terrible that he’s trying to hide,” Politico reported.

    “Maybe he doesn’t want the American public, all of you watching tonight, to know that he’s paid no federal taxes,” Clinton said.

    Clinton also admitted that she “made a mistake” about her use of a private email server while at the State Department.

    Trump went on to blame Clinton for the the rise of the IS by noting the Democrat had laid out some of her plans on her website.

    “You’re telling the enemy everything you want to do,” Trump said as Clinton shook her head in amusement. “No wonder you’ve been fighting IS your entire adult life.”

    Moderator Holt brought up the recent fatal police shootings of African-American men and asked about healing along lines of race and racism.

    “Unfortunately, race often determines too much,” she said, adding “We have to restore trust between communities and the police… everyone should be respected by the law and everyone should respect the law.”

    Trump said the country needed law and order. “African Americans and Hispanics are living in hell because it’s so dangerous. You walk down the street you get shot,” he added.

    Clinton has called for restricted gun control in the US, saying “We’ve got too many military-style weapons on the streets. In a lot of places, our police are outgunned Â… we need to keep guns out of the hands of those who’d do harm.”

    The debate is divided into 6 segments with 15 minutes given to each nominee. Two minutes will be allotted to answer a question asked by the moderator, two minutes to reply and the remaining time for the nominees to debate.

    This is the 20th US presidential debate and is being organised by the Commission on Presidential Debates.

  • ‘Senator from Punjab’: How Hillary Clinton Masterminded a Global Scheme to Replace American Workers

    ‘Senator from Punjab’: How Hillary Clinton Masterminded a Global Scheme to Replace American Workers

    • Hillary Clinton co-founded the Senate India Caucus, which anti-offshoring advocates say champions “issues important to India, including outsourcing and H-1B and L-1 visas.”
    • Clinton in 2005: “I am delighted to be the Senator from Punjab as well as from New York.”
    • Clinton has called for nearly doubling the controversial H-1B guest worker program—suggesting that American workers lack the skills to fill American jobs. She has also defended the cheap labor practices of an Indian outsourcing firm, to which the Clinton Foundation has financial ties: “We are not against all outsourcing; we are not in favor of putting up fences,” she said.
    • Shortly after the CEO of HCL—the Indian firm that helped lay off 250 American Disney workers in Orlando— called American tech graduates “unemployable”, Bill Clinton delivered a speech to HCL to the tune of nearly a quarter of a million dollars at Disney World in Orlando.
    • Reports note that Clinton has repeatedly “telegraphed” her support for a globalized world to the Indian community. At a conference of 14,000 Indian Americans, Bill Clinton extolled the virtues of “open borders, easy travel, easy immigration”.
    • In 2007, Barack Obama slammed “Hillary Clinton (D-Punjab)’s personal, financial and political ties to India… It’s all about the money,” his campaign wrote.

    At a 2006 fundraiser, Hillary Clinton jokingly told donors that she could “easily” see herself as the elected representative of foreign citizens in the Indian region of Punjab.

    As Indian Abroad reported at the time: “At the fundraiser hosted by Dr Rajwant Singh at his Potomac, Maryland, home… Clinton began by joking that, ‘I can certainly run for the Senate seat in Punjab and win easily,’ after being introduced by Singh as the Senator not only from New York but also Punjab.”

    It was apparently a line Clinton used more than once. The Sikh Council writes that at a 2005 event in the U.S. Senate, Clinton said: “I am delighted to be the Senator from Punjab as well as from New York.”

    The statement prompted the campaign of her then-opponent Sen. Barack Obama to call the New York Senator “Hillary Clinton (D-Punjab)” in a memo circulated to reporters— implying that Clinton represents foreign nations and foreign citizens rather than her own American constituents.

    The memo was titled, “HILLARY CLINTON (D-PUNJAB)’S PERSONAL FINANCIAL AND POLITICAL TIES TO INDIA,” and it extensively detailed Clinton’s willingness to put the needs and interests of foreign corporations and foreign workers in India ahead of the needs of the American people.

    The Obama campaign wrote:

    The Clintons have reaped significant financial rewards from their relationship with the Indian community, both in their personal finances and Hillary’s campaign fundraising. Hillary Clinton, who is the co-chair of the Senate India Caucus, has drawn criticism from anti-offshoring groups for her vocal support of Indian business and unwillingness to protect American jobs… Hillary Clinton has taken tens of thousands [of dollars] from companies that outsource jobs to India. Workers who have been laid off in upstate New York might not think that her recent joke that she could be elected to the Senate seat in Punjab is that funny.

    Indeed, while these revelations have received scant to virtually-no coverage by corporate media this election cycle, Clinton has an astonishingly long record of promoting Indian corporations and foreign workers at the direct expense of American workers.

    Most notably, Clinton has extensive ties to corporations responsible for some of the most egregious anti-American worker labor practices: namely, the India-based Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) and HCL.

    These India-based IT firms specialize in outsourcing and offshoring and are among the top H-1B and L-1 visa employers in the United States. Together HCL and Tata have stolen tens of thousands of U.S. jobs from American workers all across the country. HCL and Tata are responsible for the layoffs of workers from Disney, Southern California Edison, Northeast Utilities, Xerox, University of California, Siemens, and countless others.

    A review of Clinton’s record shows that she has not only defended and enabled these corporations’ anti-American worker business model, but she has also pushed to expand it— calling for substantial increases to the number of low-wage workers admitted on guest worker visas and suggesting that American workers lack the requisite skills to fill U.S. jobs.

    Interestingly, both companies have given money to the Clintons either via donations to the Clinton Foundation or paying Bill Clinton to deliver speeches.

    As the Obama campaign wrote in 2007 about Clinton’s ties to India, “It’s all about the money.”

    Tata

    As the Washington Post has reported, Tata has given tens of thousands of dollars to the Clinton Foundation:

    Although foreign nationals cannot contribute to U.S. campaigns, Clinton has won campaign support from the Indian American community, records show… Tata Consultancy Services contributed between $25,000 and $50,000 to the Clinton Foundation, and Ratan Tata, then chairman of the Tata Group, was a speaker at the Clinton Global Initiative conference in 2010.

    Tata is also a participant in the Clinton Foundation’s STEM education program.

    The Clinton’s ties to the Indian corporation extend back for over a decade.

    In 2003, then-Senator Hillary Clinton was widely-credited for recruiting and helping Tata open a software development center in Buffalo, New York.

    As a press release issued by Tata, announcing the opening, stated: “The deal was the brainchild of Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton.”

    A year before the announcement, Clinton had courted executives from Tata and other Indian businesses—giving them a tour of the region. Clinton was so instrumental to the deal that the company even flew her to Buffalo to join Tata’s CEO, Subramaniam Ramadorai, for the announcement of the company’s opening.

    Even at the time, Clinton’s decision was a controversial one.

    Five days before Clinton and Tata announced the Buffalo opening, Tata came under fire for helping a Siemens unit in Lake Mary, Florida lay off its American workers and forced them to train their lower-wage foreign replacements brought in on guest worker visas.

    As Bloomberg reported less than a week before the announcement of Tata’s Buffalo opening, “Siemens made no bones about the cost-cutting nature of the layoff.” Bloomberg noted that one of the foreign replacements, “who speaks halting English,” allegedly earned just one-third of the original American employee’s $98,000 a year salary.

    Yet despite public outrage over Siemens and Tata’s anti-American worker business model, Clinton forged ahead with Tata’s opening in Buffalo.

    “The event signaled that Clinton, who portrays herself as a fighter for American workers, had aligned herself with Indian American business leaders and Indian companies feared by the labor movement,” the Los Angeles Times reported in 2007.

    Mike Emmons, one of the American Siemens workers who was axed and replaced by a foreign worker, said that he was in touch with Clinton’s staff as all of this was happening. Yet shortly after Emmons had reached out to Senator Clinton seeking representation and protection for his colleagues from Tata’s job theft, Emmons was forced to watch as Clinton celebrated Tata at its grand opening in Buffalo.

    In July of 2016, Emmons decided to speak out in response to Clinton’s claim that she finds it “heartbreaking” when American workers are forced to train their foreign replacements. In an op-ed titled, “Don’t Believe Clinton’s Crocodile Tears Over Lost American Jobs,” Emmons denounced Clinton’s “preference for foreign guest workers over qualified Americans.” Emmons pointed specifically to Clinton’s long history of supporting expansions to the H-1B program and her support for legislation “that would have weakened the already laughably feeble ‘protections’ currently in place to prevent Americans from being displaced by guest workers.”

    “For me, the issue is personal. I am a tech worker who was replaced by a foreign guest worker,” Emmons wrote. Emmons said that as he struggled to afford medical care for his handicapped daughter and as he watched his former colleagues struggle to make ends meet, he decided:

    I could not remain silent… I reached out to elected office-holders across the country, including Hillary Clinton, who had been elected Senator from New York in 2000. Shortly after I reached out to Senator Clinton’s office, I saw that she attended the grand opening of a Tata regional office in Buffalo, New York… If Hillary Clinton truly was heartbroken about Americans being forced to train their foreign replacements, she had ample opportunity to do something about it when she was in office. I for one have good reason not to trust that she will do the right thing if elected [president].

    “Tata has been responsible for destroying tens of thousands of American jobs and depressing the wages of countless more,” said IT labor expert and Howard University Professor Ron Hira, who was a professor at the Rochester Institute of Technology at the time of Tata’s opening in Buffalo.

    Hira said that Clinton’s actions “enabled” Tata’s anti-American worker business model:

    These guest workers are imported by Tata because they are cheaper than American workers. Over the ten-year period FY2005-14, Tata imported an incredible 27,193 H-1B guest workers. We don’t know how many L-1 workers it imported but it’s likely more than 10,000. That’s at least 27,193 jobs that American workers should have been hired for or in many cases were already doing (workers at Siemens, Northeast Utilities, and Southern California Edison) and got replaced by an H-1B worker. Those are high wage jobs that pay more than $85k to American workers… Why would anyone court a company whose business model is based upon destroying American jobs? It’s the height of irrationality to think that destroying American jobs is effective economic development policy… By giving Tata her repeated endorsements she enabled these very practices.

    Indeed, in a 2004 interview with then-CNN host Lou Dobbs, Clinton defended Tata’s controversial practices, insisting that they brought jobs to Buffalo. “Well, of course I know that they outsource jobs, that they’ve actually brought jobs to Buffalo. They’ve created 10 jobs in Buffalo,” she said. “You know, outsourcing does work both ways.”

    IT expert and UC Davis professor Norm Matloff mocked Clinton for her remarks. “Yeah, 10 whole jobs!” Matloff wrote at the time. “Tata imports thousands of H-1Bs, and offshores untold numbers of jobs, but hey, they created 10 new jobs in the U.S.!”

    Matloff further pointed out that it was unknown whether those “10 whole jobs” were even given to American workers, noting that Tata may very well “have filled those 10 jobs with H-1Bs.”

    Most remarkably, during her interview with Dobbs, Clinton declared, “We are not against all outsourcing; we are not in favor of putting up fences.” Her remarks were reported by the Times of India in an article titled, “Clinton Stands Up For Tata, Outsourcing”.

    During a 2005 trip to India, Clinton again reportedly defended the Tata deal, insisting that it represented the type of cooperation that would “help prevent the kind of negative feelings that could be stirred up by” by critics of globalization. While on foreign soil, she called critics of the global marketplace, presumably American workers who have been victims of globalization, “short-sighted.”

    Around the same time, Clinton was pushing policies that would expand the displacement of American workers. In 2006, Clinton backed Ted Kennedy’s immigration plan which would have nearly doubled the cap on H-1B visas per year. In 2007, Clinton specifically called for increasing the pool of foreign workers available to corporate employers. “I also want to reaffirm my commitment to the H-1B visa program and to increase the current cap,” Clinton reportedly told a conference of Indian workers in Silicon Valley, whom she addressed via satellite. “Foreign skilled workers contribute to greatly to our US technological development,” Clinton told the group.

    In contrast to the “foreign skilled workers” Clinton said she wants to import to the U.S., Clinton suggested that Americans workers lack the necessary skills to fill U.S. jobs. Without citing any evidence to support her argument—and, indeed, disregarding all of the evidence that would prove her statement to be demonstrably false—Clinton suggested that American workers’ skills are not “in line with the jobs.”

    “There’s no shortage of talented, hardworking people in the United States—we just need to get the skills more in line with the jobs,” Clinton said amid her call for increasing the importation of foreign workers.

    This statement is remarkable given the fact that the American workers who Tata replaced—workers like Mike Emmons at Siemens—already had skills that were “in line” with the job they were filling. In fact, the American workers already filling those jobs were more skilled than their foreign replacements, as evidenced by the fact that the American workers had to spend weeks training their foreign lower-wage replacements.

    Experts have shown that there’s actually a surplus of labor in the tech labor market and have explained that this the reason IT workers have not seen a pay raise since Bill Clinton’s administration. Despite these realities, Clinton chose to parrot the debunked talking point that there is a shortage of skilled laborers while addressing a conference of Silicon Valley employers in 2007. Clinton told the crowd that, if elected President, she would address the concerns of Silicon Valley CEOs, who want a larger pool of foreign workers.

    “I have had countless meetings with people from the Silicon Valley and in Silicon Valley bemoaning the shortage in the skills that are needed,” Clinton said.

    Clinton said that across the country there are jobs that American workers are not filling—not just tech jobs, but blue collar jobs as well. Clinton suggestedthat this is because workers do not have the skills for the jobs: “I hear that across the country. There are auto mechanic jobs we cannot fill today. Thousands of them, making 50, 60, 70 thousand dollars. There are airline mechanic jobs that we can’t fill — there are so many jobs that we can’t get the right mix between the person and the skill and the job.”

    “We need to do more and we have to also recognize the shortage that exists now,” Clinton added. “So I am reaffirming my commitment to the H1B visa and increasing the current cap. Let’s just face the fact that foreign skilled workers contribute greatly to what we have to do in being innovators…Yes, increase the cap.”

    Interestingly, despite the fact that Clinton has struggled to defend her controversial support for doubling H-1B visas in the past, Computer World’s Patrick Thibodeau notes that in this election, “the H-1B visa is not mentioned in her immigration platform, her tech policy platform or in the just-released draft platform for the Democratic party.”

    HCL 

    In addition to Tata, Clinton is also tied to HCL— the firm that helped Disney World in Orlando, Florida lay off 250 American tech workers and forced them to train their lesser-skilled foreign replacements brought in on H-1B visas.

    Interestingly, Bob Iger, the Disney CEO who presided over the firing and replacement of hundreds of American workers, is also a Hillary Clinton supporter. In August, Iger hosted a big-ticket Hollywood fundraiser for Clinton at the home of billionaire entertainment mogul Haim Saban in Beverly Park, a gated community above Beverly Hills.

    Iger serves as a co-chair of an open borders lobbying firm that has advocated for the type of expansions to the foreign worker H-1B program that Clinton has championed.

    The Disney workers who suffered H-1B job theft are planning on filing a discrimination lawsuit against Disney based on the contract between Disney and HCL. The Disney workers’ attorney told Breitbart that they made discrimination claims under the Title VII of the Civil Rights Act. The claims include discrimination based on national origin (the displaced workers were American/non-Indian, while their replacements were reportedly Indian nationals).

    Indeed, in 2009, HCL caused a stir when its Chief Executive, Vineet Nayar, said that American tech grads are “unemployable”. As Daily Tech reported at the time:

    Mr. Nayar, speaking before an audience of business partners in New York City, blasted American tech grads as ‘unemployable’.  He elaborated that he views American tech grads as inferior to those from India, China, and Brazil as the Americans only want to ‘get rich’ and dream up ‘the next big thing. He says students from countries like India, China, and Brazil are more willing to put the effort into ‘boring’ details of tech process and methodology… Mr. Nayar also complains about the cost of training Americans.  He says that most Americans are simply ‘too expensive’ to train.

    The comments sparked outrage amongst the American tech community.

    Yet just a few months after HCL’s then-CEO described American tech graduates as inferior to Indian tech grads, former President Bill Clinton accepted an invitation to speak at the company for a hefty fee. After Nayar’s anti-American tech worker comments, Clinton ultimately wound up delivering two paid speeches to HCL for a total of $375,000. The first speech was in April of 2010 and the second was in November of 2011.

    Clinton delivered his November 2011 to HCL at Disney World in Orlando, Florida.

    Almost exactly three years later, 250 American workers at that very same location at Disney World in Orlando Florida were informed that they would be replaced with Indian workers that HCL had helped bring into the country on H-1B visas.

    As one employee explained, the American workers were gathered together at a meeting with a top Disney executive. Many of the workers— who had been described as “top performers”— thought the meeting was to recognize their contributions to the company, or was about a potential promotion, or a bonus of some kind. Some employees even thought the company was throwing them a surprise party. Instead, the Disney executive reportedly informedthem, “all of you in this room will be losing your jobs in the next 90 days… Your jobs have been given over to a foreign workforce. In the meantime, you will be training your replacements until your jobs are 100 percent transferred over to them and if you don’t cooperate you will not receive any severance pay.” Tears streamed down employees faces, others completely broke down and were “crying out loud,” “one employee was murmuring ‘no, this can’t be’ as they were marched out of the room.”

    Ninety days later, as one employee found himself living on unemployment payments, he spoke of the “sleepless nights” that accompanied the pressure of trying to provide for food and shelter for his family. He spoke of the feeling of alienation that accompanied the “huge influx’ of foreign workers whose presence transformed the composition of the company overnight. “A foreign language was suddenly being spoken throughout the building hallways,” the worker said. He said he felt “betrayed” and described the “humiliat[ing],” “disgraceful” and “demoralizing” experience as he had no choice but “to watch a foreign worker completely take over my job.”

    “I’ve spoken to thousands of American families whose lives have been destroyed by this business model,” said the Disney workers’ attorney, Sara Blackwell, who runs an organization that represents high-skilled American workers who have been replaced by low-wage foreign guest workers.

    “American workers tend to have a very emotional reaction to being forced to train their replacements,” Blackwell explained.

    They know that they are being sold out. And they feel as though they are contributing to the death of the American tech workforce by training their replacements, but they’ve been forced to do it in order to get their severance pay, which they need so that they can pay their mortgage, and feed their families. Workers tell me that they feel physically sick as they’re forced to train their replacements. They go home and vomit; they cry every single night; they go into counseling; they’re admitted to hospitals; there are divorces; we’ve seen two suicides as a result of these cheap labor practices. And when the workers are officially let go and can’t find work, that kind of emotional distress drives a lot of them to homelessness, a lot of them move in with their older parents. It has single-handedly destroyed American families by the thousands.

    “Hillary Clinton is by far the worst person we could have in the White House,” Blackwell added. “If Hillary wins, there will be no protections for these American workers. They will have no voice.”

    India’s Favorite Senator

    The Obama campaign memo hitting Clinton’s ties to India also emphasized that “in 2004, Clinton co-founded and became the co-chair of the Senate India Caucus which was coordinated by the U.S. India Political Action Committee (USINPAC).”

    According to the Los Angeles Times, the USINPAC “cites the Tata deal as one of Clinton’s top three achievements as a senator– and evidence of a turnabout, in its view, from her past criticism of outsourcing. ‘Even though she was against outsourcing at the beginning of her political career,’ the USINPAC website says, ‘she has since changed her position and now maintains that offshoring brings as much economic value to the United States as to the country where services are outsourced, especially India.’”

    Information Technology Professionals Association of America (ITPAA)— an anti-offshoring advocacy group that labeled Clinton a “weasel” in 2005 for her embrace of anti-American worker labor practices—described Clinton’s India caucus as “a group of senators that supports issues important to India, including outsourcing and H-1B and L-1 visas.”

    A blog post on the CWA union’s website warned that Clinton’s India Caucus represents, “the first time in the history of the U.S. Senate that a country-focused caucus has been constituted.” The CWA post urged readers to “check if your U.S. Senator is a member of the caucus. If Yes, WRITE and object to the H-1B Visa Program and OFFSHORE OUTSOURCING OF AMERICAN JOBS!”

    Indeed, as the Los Angeles Times reported, in her effort to “woo” wealthy Indian Americans donors, Clinton has repeatedly “telegraphed” her support for a globalized world, including the benefits of “open borders” and outsourcing.

    Clinton is successfully wooing wealthy Indian Americans, many of them business leaders with close ties to their native country and an interest in protecting outsourcing laws and expanding access to worker visas. Her campaign has held three fundraisers in the Indian American community recently, one of which raised close to $3 million, its sponsor told an Indian news organization… Her campaign continues to telegraph — sometimes in front of Indian American audiences — that she sees benefits to a globalized world. Three weeks ago, her husband drew applause at a conference of 14,000 Indian Americans in Washington as he extolled the benefits of “open borders, easy travel, easy immigration.” He said the outsourcing debate bothered him because it failed to acknowledge the contributions of Indians who settled in the U.S. The same day, he headlined a fundraiser at the conference for his wife’s campaign.

    While then-Senator Obama—who as President pushed policies to expand the displacement of American workers through large-scale foreign worker programs—eventually apologized for the memo’s “caustic tone,” his campaign’s message was unmistakably clear: a Hillary Clinton Presidency would not represent the interests of American workers, but would instead represent the desires of wealthy donors and foreign corporations.

    While Clinton’s record on these issues were apparently a topic of discussion during the 2008 election, it is perhaps interesting that in the 2016 election—which has been so driven by the issues of trade, immigration, national sovereignty, and opposition to globalization— Clinton’s history on this issue has received so little attention. It remains to be seen whether Clinton will be asked about her controversial positions on these subjects during next week’s debate.

  • Trump owes Obama an apology: Clinton

    Trump owes Obama an apology: Clinton

    Washington, Sep 16 (TIP): Donald Trump, the Republican presidential nominee, owes an apology to the US President Barack Obama for lying about the latters place of birth, his Democratic rival, Hillary Clinton demanded today ramping up the attack on the real estate mogul.

    “Barack Obama was born in America, plain and simple, and Donald Trump owes him and the American people an apology,” Clinton said.

    Moments later Trump said that Obama was born in the US, but did not say anything about the apology.

    The White House said the US President does not care about the apology.

    The Democratic Party also demanded an apology from Trump on this issue.

    At a morning event, Clinton alleged that for five years Trump had led the birther movement to delegitimise the first black president.

    “His campaign was founded on this outrageous lie. There is no erasing it in history. Just yesterday, Trump again refused to say with his own words that the president was born in the United States,” she said.

    Trump, she alleged, “is feeding into the worst impulses, the bigotry and bias that lurks” in the country.

    “There is no new Donald Trump. There never will be. Trump looks at President Obama after eight years as our president, he still doesnt see him as an American,” she said.

    “Think of how dangerous that is. Imagine a person in the Oval Office who traffics in conspiracy theories and refuses to let them go, no matter what the facts are. Imagine a President who sees someone who doesnt look like him and doesnt agree with him and thinks that person must not be a real American. Trump is unfit to be president of the US,” Clinton said amidst applause from the audience.

    “We cannot become insensitive to what he says and what he stirs up. We cant just accept this. Weve got to stand up to it. If we dont, it wont stop. In addition to the President, Trump looks at a distinguished federal judge born in Indiana and he sees a Mexican, not an American,” she alleged.

    “He looks at a Gold Star family and sees them as Muslims, not patriotic Americans. He looks at women and decides how our looks rate on a scale of one to ten. I look at America, I see everyone. I see our great diversity which is one of our core strengths, not our burden. We know who Donald Trump is. Now its time for our country to show who we are and reject his divisive vision,” Clinton said.

  • Clinton reclaims National Lead as Voters continue to get divided by race, sex and education

    Clinton reclaims National Lead as Voters continue to get divided by race, sex and education

    WASHINGTON (TIP): With 52 days left to the big day, Hillary Clinton leads Donald Trump by five points in a head-to-head matchup in the latest national poll of likely voters from Quinnipiac University released Wednesday, Sep 14, but the margin has been chopped in half since the last time the poll was released in August.

    Clinton was ahead of Trump 48%-43% in a head-to-head matchup with likely voters nationally on Sep 14. (In a survey released in late August, Clinton had 51% and Trump was at 41%.) Regardless of whom they are supporting, majority of the voters were supporting their candidate because of the opponent rather than liking their choice.

    More than half-54 percent of Clinton supporters said opposing Trump was their main reason for backing the Democratic nominee. Approximately two-thirds of likely Trump voters-66 percent-said their main reason for supporting him is because they opposed Clinton.

    The latest results come as other state and national polls show similarly tightening margins between both major candidates, who have traded words in recent days over concerns about transparency and health.

    The Quinnipiac poll began last Thursday, Sep 8, a day after the Commander in Chief Forum, and remained active in the field until Tuesday, Sep 13, after days of public attention on Clinton’s health following her early departure from a 9/11 memorial on Sunday and subsequent revelation that she had been diagnosed with pneumonia.

    When third-party candidates were included in poll, Clinton and Trump were separated by just 2 points, which is within the margin of error.

    CLINTON HAD 41%, TRUMP HAD 39%, LIBERTARIAN PARTY CANDIDATE GARY JOHNSON HAD 13%, AND THE GREEN PARTY’S JILL STEIN CAME IN AT 4%.

    Trump led with white voters by 10 points (51%-41%), while Clinton was ahead with non-white voters 66%-19%.

    Trump led with men 50%-41%, while Clinton led with female voters 54%-36%.

    TRUMP LEADS CLINTON IN NEW OHIO, NEVADA, FLORIDA POLLS

    The Republican nominee is enjoying a 5-point lead in Ohio in a new Bloomberg Politics poll. In a head-to-head matchup between Clinton and Trump, he led 48%-43%.

    The margin remained the same when third-party candidates were added. Trump had 44%, Clinton had 39%, Libertarian Gary Johnson had 10% and Green Party candidate Jill Stein had 3%.

    The Bloomberg Politics poll was taken over some of Clinton’s most difficult days of the cycle.

    She said “half” of Trump’s supporters were “deplorable” Friday night, and on Sunday she wobbled as she left a 9/11 memorial, while recovering from previously undisclosed pneumonia.

    Trump’s lead in Ohio is consistent with a CNN/ORC poll of likely voters released Wednesday which had him at 46%, Clinton at 41%. Johnson had 8% support and Stein had 2%.

    Trump was also ahead in Florida in the CNN/ORC poll – though the 3-point difference fell within the margin of error. Trump had 47%and Clinton had 44%. Johnson had 6% and Stein had 1%.

    And in Nevada, Trump had a 2-point lead over Clinton – also within the margin of error – in a new Monmouth University poll released Wednesday.

    Trump had the support of 44% of likely voters in Nevada, while Clinton had 42%. Johnson had the backing of 8%; Stein was not included.

  • AAPI Victory Fund Launches Anti-Trump Ad in Virginia

    AAPI Victory Fund Launches Anti-Trump Ad in Virginia

    WASHINGTON(TIP): The Asian-American and Pacific Islander community has launched an anti-Donald Trump campaign in the crucial state of Virginia, alleging that the Republican presidential candidate continues to make fear-mongering comments against the American Muslim community.

    The 70-year-old reality TV star’s platform “is steeped in bigotry” and needs to be countered, the Asian-American and Pacific Islanders Victory Fund said while kicking off its campaign by releasing its first web ad, “Rejecting Hate,” which it said is targeted at voters in Virginia.

    Virginia has emerged as a swing state, and is now heavily leaning towards Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton.

    During the primaries, the AAPI Victory Fund had endorsed 69-year-old Clinton.

    “Donald Trump has consistently chosen to divide our country with hateful demagoguery that fuels anti-Muslim sentiments across the country,” said Dilawar Syed, AAPI Victory Fund co-founder and vice chair.

    “We must fight back against a candidate whose platform is steeped in bigotry and who believes that attacking a diverse and engaged American community will somehow give him the path to the White House. We won’t stand for it, and we won’t let it happen,” he said.

    “President Obama won our state by a margin of three percent in 2012, a state where Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders represent six percent of the population,” said Shekar Narasimhan, AAPI Victory Fund chair.

    “As a Virginia resident and voter, I believe our community can be the margin of victory this November. We can affect this election through outreach and mobilizing voters throughout Virginia,” he said. Launched in January 2016, the AAPI Victory Fund is the first super political action committee of its kind. It is now mobilizing AAPI voters in key battleground states where growing AAPI populations could be the margin of victory.

    With a population of more than 21 million and representing six percent of the country’s population, AAPIs are the fastest-growing and most diverse minority groups in America.

    Indian-Americans for Trump welcome his immigration policy

    Indian-American supporters of Donald Trump have welcomed the Republican presidential nominee’s immigration policy, saying it will strengthen his base.

    “The address definitely strengthens his base and, we read that once his message is assimilated by the Latino population interested in keeping the illegal immigrants in the USA, his approval among them will increase somewhat,” said A D Amar, president of Indian-Americans for Trump 2016.

    “What we read from this policy address by Trump is that if the illegal immigrants who have not committed crime continue to live in the shadow, there will be no rounding up of them by any deportation task force that he promised to enlarge if elected the next president,” Amar said, commenting on the major policy speech of Trump on immigration.

    Amar said that in his address, Trump outlined his immigration policy with emotion and toughness that his followers will appreciate and strengthen his base.

    “However, he spared mass deportation for the largest part of the 11 million illegal immigrants who have not committed any crime, are not public charge, are gainfully integrated in the American society, and continue to do so,” he said.

    “We see this as a softening, and showing heart for the immigrants living in the USA. Nevertheless, he was very clear that if they wanted path to citizenship, they will have to go back to the country they came from and go through the process to be legalized,” Amar said.

  • Stop boring us, Mr. Trump

    Stop boring us, Mr. Trump

    As the sole surviving super power, the United States demands the attention of the world. And every four years it enacts a long-running circus that often entertains the universe by its weirdness, if nothing else. But the most recent extravaganza is beginning to pall because it has become plainly boring.

    Everyone knows that the contest is between Donald Trump, the billionaire realty mogul and one-time beauty pageant impresario, and Hillary Clinton, one-time First Lady, a senator from New York and Secretary of State. Trump has abundantly proved that he is a loudmouth who delights in insulting women, Muslims, Mexicans and anyone else he hates on a particular day on his way to winning his Republican Party nomination in the primaries.

    For her part, Hillary was no shoo-in for the Democratic Party’s nomination, with Bernie Sanders with his Left platform giving her a tough fight till the very end. Given the tantalizing prospect of becoming the first woman president of her country, Clinton has met with apathy, if not worse, from many women voters.

    In fact, the contest has become one between two unpopular candidates for very different reasons. Trump the showman has got thus far by treading on everyone’s toes and living to fight another day. Hillary is saddled with the sea of emails she unwisely sent on a private server while secretary of state. Trump has a legion of enemies for good reasons but Hillary has many detractors because she has a trust deficit.

    Expectedly, American newspapers and television stations and websites are giving the presidential contest acres of space and time. But why should the world be subjected to a repetitive circus that seems to have a predictable end? Every event or happening in the US is not of great import to the rest of the world unless Trump emerges as the unlikely winner with his outlandish ideas on foreign policy. Former establishment figures are reduced to writing open letters dissociating themselves from his foreign policy adventures.

    How then can the world insulate itself from a predictable tale of human folly?The French, with their nuanced view of history and social life, have made a feast of Trump’s foibles (read Le Monde Diplomatique). Others have sought to laugh off such Trumpisms as referring to a woman’s menstrual cycle or the size of his own manliness. Yet others have bemoaned the depth of depravity in American public discourse.

    Looking at it, the American political contest does not present a pretty picture. Some rough jokes and backslapping and backstabbing one can take in one’s stride but misogyny is not funny nor a taunting description of a woman’s body functions. Nothing, it seems, is out of bounds for Trump.

  • DONALD TRUMP LEADS IN LATEST POLLS

    DONALD TRUMP LEADS IN LATEST POLLS

    NEW YORK (TIP): In 60 days we will vote for our next President. And, the new CNN/ORC poll suggests an extremely close contest contrary to what political pundits had speculated a year ago.

    trump-clintonSince this is a CNN poll, it cannot be easily dismissed by Clinton campaign as a right-wing media outlet-finds that Clinton’s lead over GOP nominee Donald Trump has evaporated.

    Trump tops Clinton 45% to 43% in the new survey, with Libertarian Gary Johnson standing at 7% among likely voters in this poll and the Green Party’s Jill Stein at just 2%.

    Just a couple weeks ago, Clinton’s convention propelled her to an 8-point lead among registered voters in an early-August CNN/ORC Poll. And now, Clinton’s lead has largely evaporated despite a challenging month for Trump, which saw an overhaul of his campaign staff, announcements of support for Clinton from several high-profile Republicans and criticism of his campaign strategy.

    But most voters say they still expect to see Clinton prevail in November, and 59% think she will be the one to get to 270 electoral votes vs. 34% who think Trump has the better shot at winning.

    Wit is worth noting here that Clinton and her allies have outspent Trump and his allies by an eye-popping 4.5-to-1 margin in August as reported by the Observer.

    The Analysis

    Women break for Clinton (53% to 38%) while men shift Trump’s way (54% to 32%). Among women, those who are unmarried make up the core of her support, 73% of unmarried women back Clinton compared with just 36% of married women. Among men, no such marriage gap emerges, as both unmarried and married men favor Trump.

    Younger voters are in Clinton’s corner (54% to 29%among those under age 45) while the older ones are more apt to back Trump (54% to 39% among those age 45 or older).

    Whites mostly support Trump (55% to 34%), while non-whites favor Clinton by a nearly 4-to-1 margin (71% to 18%).

    Most college grads back Clinton while those without degrees mostly support Trump, and that divide deepens among white voters.

    Whites who do not hold college degrees support Trump by an almost 3-to-1 margin (68% to 24%) while whites who do have college degrees split 49% for Clinton to 36% for Trump and 11% for Johnson.

    “I really pay no attention to polls. When they are good for me — and there have been a lot of them that have been good for me recently — I don’t pay attention,” Clinton said. “When they are not so good, I don’t pay attention. We are on a course that we are sticking with.”

    Among the broader pool of registered voters, Clinton edges Trump by 3 points. The shift among these voters since the convention is largely due to a rebound in Trump’s numbers rather than a slide in Clinton’s. He’s gone from 37% support then to 41% among registered voters now.

    Trump holds an edge over Clinton as more trusted to handle two of voters’ top four issues — the economy (56%trust Trump vs. 41% Clinton) and terrorism (51% Trump to 45% Clinton). Clinton holds a solid edge on foreign policy (56% trust her to Trump’s 40%), and the public is divided over the fourth issue in the bunch, immigration. On that, 49% favor Clinton’s approach, 47% Trump’s. At Trump’s recent campaign appearances, he has argued that he would do more to improve life for racial and ethnic minorities, but voters seem to disagree, 58% say Clinton is better on that score vs. 36% who choose Trump, and among non-whites, 86% choose Clinton to just 12% who think Trump would better improve their lives.

    Trump has his largest edge of the campaign as the more honest and trustworthy of the two major candidates (50%say he is more honest and trustworthy vs. just 35%choosing Clinton) and as the stronger leader, 50% to 42%. Clinton continues to be seen as holding the better temperament to serve effectively as president (56% to 36%) and better able to handle the responsibilities of commander in chief (50% to 45%).

    Read the complete poll results @

    http://www.documentcloud.org/documents/3098806-Post-Labor-Day.html

  • Aleppo Confounds Libertarian Presidential Candidate Johnson: ‘What’s Aleppo?’

    Aleppo Confounds Libertarian Presidential Candidate Johnson: ‘What’s Aleppo?’

    NEW YORK (TIP): If it was greater attention Libertarian presidential candidate Gary Johnson wanted, he got it but probably not the kind he wanted.

    As part of a media blitz in New York to try to raise his polling numbers enough to qualify for the upcoming presidential debate, Johnson fielded a range of questions Thursday, September 8 with the aim of demonstrating he can take on Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. But one very pressing question stumped him.

    “What would you do, if you were elected, about Aleppo?”  Johnson was asked by Barnicle on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” Thursday, September 8 referring to Syria’s largest city, which has been engulfed by the country’s ongoing civil war.

    Johnson said: “About…?”

    “Aleppo,” Barnicle repeated.

    “And,” Johnson asked, “what is Aleppo?” Barnicle, in seeming disbelief, said: “You’re kidding.”

    “No,” Johnson said.

    “Aleppo is in Syria,” Barnicle explained. “It’s the epicenter of the refugee crisis.”

    “OK, got it, got it,” Johnson interrupted.

    “Well, with regard to Syria, I do think that it’s a mess and that the only way that we deal with Syria is to join hands with Russia to diplomatically bring that at an end.”

    Later, Johnson was asked by Bloomberg’s Mark Halperin how he felt about the interview.

    “I’m incredibly frustrated with myself,” he said.

    When pressed whether Johnson felt it should be considered a “big flap,” the former New Mexico governor replied: “Well sure, it should. Absolutely.”

    Following the interview, Johnson attempted some damage control, releasing a statement that said he “blanked” when asked about Aleppo.

    “This morning, I began my day by setting aside any doubt that I’m human. Yes, I understand the dynamics of the Syrian conflict — I talk about them every day. But hit with ‘What about Aleppo?’, I immediately was thinking about an acronym, not the Syrian conflict,” Johnson wrote. “I blanked. It happens, and it will happen again during the course of this campaign.”

    “Can I name every city in Syria? No,” he continued. “Should I have identified Aleppo?Yes. Do I understand its significance? Yes.”

    Johnson went on to say that while he served as New Mexico’s governor, “there were many things I didn’t know off the top of my head.”

    But, he said, “I succeeded by surrounding myself with the right people, getting to the bottom of important issues, and making principled decisions. It worked. That is what a President must do.”

    Syria’s 2011 pro-democracy uprising, which gradually devolved into civil war, has sparked a refugee crisis across the Middle East and Europe as millions fled their homes for safety. When reminded by MSNBC on Thursday, Mr. Johnson said he’d work with Russia to find a diplomatic solution to the civil war and that the conflict was an example of the dangers of meddling in the region.

    Mr. Johnson’s blunder has sparked widespread mockery, with #WhatisAleppo becoming a trending hashtag on Twitter, and Hillary Clinton chuckling at a press conference when asked about Johnson’s flub. “You can find Aleppo on a map,” she said.

  • US cant elect a man who belittles allies: Biden

    US cant elect a man who belittles allies: Biden

    Hinting at Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump, US Vice President Joe Biden has said that Americans cant elect a man who belittles closest allies and embraces Russian President Vladimir Putin.

    “We cant elect a man who belittles our closest allies and embraces Vladimir Putin. A man who seeks to sow division among our allies for his own gain. And disorder around the world,” Biden said addressing the Pittsburgh Labor Day Parade along with Senator Tim Kaine, the vice presidential running mate of Hillary Clinton.

    Biden endorsed Clinton as next occupant of the White House.

    “Its time we get out of our own way and get Trump out of the way and elect this guy and Hillary Clinton, president and vice president of the United States of America,” Biden said.

    “Folks, we cant let it happen. Let me tell you what I literally tell every world leader. And I want you guys to be reminded of it. Its never, never, never, ever been a good bet to bet against the American people. Not one single time,” said the Vice President.

    “In America, we never bow. We never bend. We never break when confronted with crisis. We endure and we overcome and its because of you weve been able to do it. Its time to get up and holler. Its time to get up and get back. I am more optimistic about the prospects America today than I ever have been in my whole career,” Biden said.

  • Indian Americans Launch Door-To-Door Support Campaign for Trump in New Jersey

    Indian Americans Launch Door-To-Door Support Campaign for Trump in New Jersey

    In a desperate attempt to gather more ethnic (non-white) support for Donald Trump’s Presidential bid, a PAC called Volunteers of Indian-Americans for Trump 2016 has launched a door-to-door campaign in New Jersey’s Mercer and Monmouth counties, reported PTI.

    The agenda of the campaign is to raise awareness of Trump’s agenda among perspective voters with evidence based on past behavior of Hillary Clinton  and why she will not be a good president.

    Indian-American supporters of the Republican presidential nominee argue that this mode of campaigning is still an effective tool to win people’s heart ahead of the November 8 general elections.

    AD Amar, president, Indian-Americans for Donald Trump was joined by political activist Satya Dosapati Narayana, West Windsor Township Republican Committeeperson Rimma Rosenberg, Mercer County Republican Committee Second Vice Chair Colleen DiPastina and her husband and Monmouth County Republican State Committeeman John Costigan and his wife, the media release said.

    “The campaigners presented evidence in the form of past behavior to convince the voters why Hillary Clinton will not be a good president and why Trump will be good. With a few exceptions, they hope they changed minds of some voters,” the media release said.

  • Polls Tighten in US Presidential Race

    Polls Tighten in US Presidential Race

    NEW YORK (TIP): Hillary Clinton opened her largest margin on Aug. 9, when she had a 7.6 percentage point advantage over Donald Trump, the Republican nominee, in the RealClearPolitics average of national polls. At the time, she was consistently reaching 50 percent support.

    But Clinton’s lead has shrunk since then, to 4.3 points in the RealClearPolitics average, and she’s fallen short of the 50 percent mark in the last six national polls. She has settled into the mid-40 percent range, presenting an opportunity for her Republican rival.

    But despite the improving picture for Trump, Clinton remains the favorite to win.

    She holds a 4.3-point advantage nationally over Trump in the RealClearPolitics average of polls and leads almost across the board in the battleground states that will decide the election.

    Trump’s path to the necessary 270 electoral votes is exceedingly narrow, with a handful of swing states – Colorado and Virginia among them -already appearing out of reach.

    And while the GOP nominee is running competitively in Florida and Ohio, Trump must also win Pennsylvania, which looks like a steep climb.

    For Trump, the deficit in polling has at least reached a level he can overcome as he enters the post-Labor Day sprint.

    Clinton is being dragged down by awful favorability ratings, which have prevented her from running away with the race.

    “It’s not in the bag for her yet,” Patrick Murray, the polling director at Monmouth University, told The Hill.

    An NBC News-SurveyMonkey poll released Tuesday found Clinton’s lead falling from 6 points earlier this month to 4 points. In that survey, Trump reduced Clinton’s lead among independents by half, from 8 points to 4 points.

    Trump has also closed the gap in Reuters-Ipsos and Monmouth polls released this week, although he still trails by 3 points and 7 points, respectively.

    Pollsters interviewed by The Hill say that Clinton’s polling bounce after her party’s national convention was aided and perhaps magnified by Trump’s feud with the family of a slain U.S. solider.

    They see a race returning to an equilibrium in which Clinton holds a statistically significant advantage, but opportunities exist for Trump to win over Republican holdouts and independents.

    “They’re both hitting ceilings of support because of their hugely negative favorability ratings,” said GOP pollster David Winston. “The challenge is figuring out how to get people who don’t like them at all to get out and vote for them.” Electoral experts agree that the map looks favorable for Clinton.

    Forecasting models from the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics and Frontloading HQ have Clinton winning 347 electoral votes, which would be slightly better than President Obama’s showing against Republican Mitt Romney in 2012.

    Both models have Clinton running the table on the battleground states Obama won in 2012, plus winning in North Carolina, where Romney narrowly prevailed.

    Several swing states appear to have gotten away from Trump.

    Polls show Clinton leading by double digits in Colorado, Wisconsin and Virginia. Clinton is ahead by 9 points in the only poll of New Hampshire released this month.

    Furthermore, Trump only leads by 1 or 2 points in Missouri and Arizona, states that traditionally have been safely in the Republican column. Trump and Clinton are locked in a virtual tie in Georgia, which has gone red in presidential races for the last 20 years.

    Things look better for Trump in Nevada, Iowa and North Carolina. He trails in all three, but is within the polls’ margins of error.

    The election is likely to hinge on Florida, Ohio and Pennsylvania – and pollsters say Trump must win all three.

    In Florida, Clinton leads by 2.7 points in the RealClearPolitics average, down from 4.5 points in early August.

    In Ohio, Clinton’s lead in the RealClearPolitics average is 3.8 points, down from a 5-point advantage in recent weeks. An Emerson University survey released on Monday found the nominees tied at 43 percent.

    Pennsylvania will be the toughest state of the group for Trump. Clinton leads there by 8 points in the RealClearPolitics average.

    An Emerson survey put Clinton’s lead at only 3 points there on Monday, but pollsters will need more data like it before they see the state getting more competitive.

    A Monmouth poll released on Tuesday found Clinton ahead by 8 points in the Keystone State, which is more in line with most other recent surveys.

    Clinton also holds an 8-point lead in Michigan, another Rust Belt state that Trump has circled as potentially fertile ground for his populist pitch. An Emerson survey released on Monday found Clinton ahead by only 5 points there, while a Suffolk University poll released this week put her lead at 7 points.

    “Clinton’s battleground advantage is formidable,” said UVA Center for Politics analyst Geoffrey Skelley. “Trump basically needs to run the table on the swing states that are favorable for him right now, plus win in Ohio, Florida and Pennsylvania. He’ll need his fortunes to improve for that to happen. It’s a tough route.”

    One task for Trump is shoring up votes in his own party.

    Clinton routinely receives support from more than 80 percent of Democrats polled, but the latest Reuters/Ipsos survey found Trump with only 73 percent support from likely Republican voters.

    Romney got 93 percent GOP support in 2012 and still lost by almost 4 points nationally.

    Pollsters say the deficit among Republican voters is largely due to white, college-educated women, a group that traditionally leans conservative but has rejected Trump so far.

    Trump also needs to improve his standing among independent voters, which Romney won by 5 points in 2012.

    The Trump campaign has argued that his support is being underestimated in polls because those being interviewed have been reluctant to admit they plan on casting a ballot for the controversial candidate.

    Pollsters interviewed by The Hill aren’t ready to make that leap yet.

    “It’s an interesting theory, but there’s no data to support it,” said Winston.

    Some pollsters actually believe Clinton’s level of support is being underestimated.

    Third-party candidates – Libertarian Party nominee Gary Johnson and Green Party nominee Jill Stein – have been pulling more support away from Clinton so far. But few believe either third-party candidate will pull as much support as they’re currently getting in the polls on Election Day, potentially adding to Clinton’s total.

    In 2012, Obama outperformed his standing in the polls by virtue of his superior get-out-the-vote operation.

    Clinton will have the money and ground game advantage over Trump in 2016, potentially setting her up to match Obama’s showing.

    “The thing that could throw all this off is that we’re looking at an ahistorical election,” Murray said. “We’ve never seen two candidates who are this unpopular. That’s the wild card.”

  • ‘It’s too late now to say sorry’ : Clinton to Trump

    ‘It’s too late now to say sorry’ : Clinton to Trump

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Democratic US Presidential nominee Hillary Clinton on August 23 told her Republican opponent Donald Trump on Twitter that it was too late to apologize for the highly controversial remarks he’s been making throughout his campaign. Clinton’s message to Trump – accompanied by a video compilation of Trump’s comments – came after the real estate magnate on Saturday said at a North Carolina rally that he regretted saying things that “may have caused personal pain.”

    “It’s too late now to say sorry,” Clinton’s tweet reads. The accompanying video begins with a clip from the rally where Trump attempted to express regret for his past comments. “Sometimes, in the heat of debate, and speaking on a multitude of issues, you don’t choose the right words…And believe it or not, I regret it, particularly where it may have caused personal pain,” he’d said.

    In the video, the Clinton campaign interspersed the clip of that conciliatory statement with clips from older speeches and interviews featuring the Republican nominee. In these clips, he is seen calling Republican primary candidate Marco Rubio ‘Little Marco,’ (allegedly a reference to Rubio’s height) calling for a ban on Muslims entering the US, and referring to an unnamed woman as “a disgusting pig.”

    The video goes on to show other controversial statements involving Trump – notably his suggestion that the mother of a fallen Pakistani-origin Muslim American soldier wasn’t allowed to speak at the Democratic National Convention, while her husband famously criticized Trump’s call for a ban on Muslims coming to America. It also shows him categorically refusing – on a number of occasions – to express regret or apologize for his views and remarks, in response to questions from journalists. “I like not to regret anything,” he is heard saying. (Agencies)

  • Hillary Clinton leads Donald Trump by double digits in new national poll

    Hillary Clinton leads Donald Trump by double digits in new national poll

    NEW YORK (TIP): A Quinnipiac University survey released Thursday, August 25, found 51 percent of likely voters in the U.S. support Clinton while 41 percent said they support Trump.

    In a four-way race, Clinton leads Trump 45 percent to 38 percent while 10 percent support Libertarian Gary Johnson and 4 percent back Green Party candidate Jill Stein.

    Clinton’s expansive lead is due to support from women and non-white voters, Quinnipiac said. Trump, meanwhile, leads among men and white voters.

    The poll found that 32 percent of Clinton’s supporters actually back her while 47 percent of them are voting to oppose Trump. On the other hand, a quarter of Trump’s supporters actually support him compared to nearly two-thirds who are voting for him mainly to oppose Clinton.

    Both candidates, according to the poll have negative favorability ratings –Clinton’s favorable/unfavorable rating is 41 percent/53 percent, while Trump’s is 33 percent favorable / 61 percent unfavorable. Thirty-seven percent of likely voters said they’d consider a third-party candidate.

    But two-thirds of voters said Clinton is qualified to serve as president, the poll found, whereas 58 percent said Trump is not qualified.

    Three-quarters of voters said that Trump should release his tax returns, including 62 percent of Republicans. Nearly 60 percent of voters said “the way Donald Trump talks appeals to bigotry.”

    A Suffolk University poll released Thursday, August 25, found Clinton leads Trump by 7 percentage points in Michigan.

    The Quinnipiac poll surveyed 1,498 voters between August 18 and 24 with a 2.5 percentage point margin of error.

  • Point Counterpoint – Hillary Clinton Immigration Policies Would Widely Benefit the South Asian Community

    Point Counterpoint – Hillary Clinton Immigration Policies Would Widely Benefit the South Asian Community

    Donald Trump’s criticism of Khizr and Ghazala Khan, Pakistani American parents of the United States Army Captain Humayun Khan who was killed in action in Iraq, has raised red flags in the South Asian community. Trump stated that Mrs. Khan was not able to speak at the Democratic National Convention, insinuating because she was a Muslim. Like many of you, I found Trump’s response to be vile and disrespectful. Trump’s remark about the Khan family demonstrates he is insensitive to the South Asian community. This presidential election is crucial time for South Asians and I encourage you to vote.

    Although numerous voters say the presidential election is a choice between the lesser of two evils, the choice for South Asians is clear if we weigh the candidates’ immigration policies. Hillary Clinton’s policies are non-discriminatory, practical and will provide opportunities for immigrants and for America that thrives when immigrants are welcomed.

    Donald Trump, in contrast, proposes to ban Muslims from the U.S., at least temporarily. Hillary Clinton has dismissed that idea as un-American. In fact, according to her website, she will continue the J-1 visa exchange visitor program, increase H1-B visa holders in the STEM field, allow fee waivers to defray the cost of the naturalization process, and provide supplementary educational support during the complex and tedious naturalization application process.

    Trump’s policy on barring Muslims is not only discriminatory but also unconstitutional. His policy assumes every Muslim is a threat to national security. This is simply not true. The Pew Research Center finds roughly 1.6 billion people practice the religionof Islam. Yet, “extremist” Muslims make-up only.00625% percent of all Muslims.

    Let’s take a look at the constitutionality of the ban. I echo Khizr Khan’s sentiment to Trump: “Have you ever read the U.S. Constitution?”. According to Richard Friedman, a law professor at the University of Michigan, banning one religion is unconstitutional under the U.S. Equal Protection Clause and the First Amendment’s doctrine of freedom of religion. Also, there is no due process involved which is unconstitutional under the Fifth and Fourteen Amendments.

    Another concerning matter is the H1-B and J-1 visa policies. As Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton affirmed the J-1 visa policy which is the exchange visitor program. Under this program, many of the best and the brightest international students come on J-1 visa including the Fulbright Scholars. This visa program enhances international diplomacy and helps spread democratic ideas back to the student’s home country. Trump on the other hand wants to scrap the J-1 visa work requirement or/and end the J-1 visa exchange program.

    On H-1B policy, Hillary Clinton intends to raise the cap on H1-B visa holders. Many of our South Asian population gain vast opportunities to flourish under the H1-B visa. Raising the cap is pivotal in the STEM industries due to the shortages in the field. To further validate the H-1B visa, the late Steve Jobs CEO of Apple and Mark Zuckerberg CEO of Facebook, are both advocates in expanding the cap.

    In terms of the naturalization process, Hillary Clinton wants to promote visa holders to become U.S. citizens by expanding the fee waivers to minimize the cost of naturalization. Furthermore, her immigration policies provide educational assistance during the naturalization application process. Through these policies, she acknowledges the “American dream” to become a U.S. citizen because America represents freedom and the social mobility to climb the ladder. Trump on the other hand does not grasp this concept. Michelle Obama said at the Democratic National Convention “don’t let anyone ever tell you that this country isn’t great”. As South Asian immigrants and the children of South Asian immigrants, we know America is great. We don’t take freedom for granted. There is no question the Khan family fervently values this belief.

    Overall, Hillary Clinton’s immigration policies are not discriminatory. It is logical and practical. It follows the basic American principles of diversity, unity, and life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. We must stand with Khizr and Ghazala Khan in defending their religion, their son’s honor, and freedom. Many of South Asians that emigrated to the U.S. and the children of South Asian immigrants deeply cherish the basic freedom given to us by the U.S. Constitution. Hillary stands with the South Asian community. I am with her. I urge you to be with her and vote for her. We are stronger together.

    (The views expressed are author’s own. The author, a graduate of Columbia University, currently works as an educator in New York City)

  • Point Counterpoint – TRUMP WILL BE A BETTER SUPPORT FOR INDIA THAN HILLARY CLINTON

    Point Counterpoint – TRUMP WILL BE A BETTER SUPPORT FOR INDIA THAN HILLARY CLINTON

    Hillary will be an extension of Obama Administration a proven anti-India administration. Since April 2015 to March 2016 only Obama gave most sophisticated military hardware worth of $ 1.62 Billion to Pakistan despite strong opposition from some American lawmakers and India. History speaks for itself Republican Presidents are more friendly with India.Democrats have never given anything of significance to India rather they are pro Pakistan. Democrat Bill Clinton visited India only near the end of 7th year of his presidency to enjoy camel & elephant rides, sightseeing and authentic Indian cuisines paid by Indians.

    In 2008 it was Republican President George Bush that gave the Civil Nuclear deal to India and Hillary Clinton as Democrat Senator voted against the deal. When Hillary became Secretary of State she wanted the parallel approach to India and Pakistan on nuclear matters. That is besides the point China gave Pakistan two 300 MW’s reactors to be financed, constructed and operated by Chinese companies. There are no stringent conditions attached to this deal like IAEA inspections or other safe guards imposed on India.

    Hillary Clinton is a dangerous Candidate for President of America for Americans & other peace loving nations around the world: Hillary Clinton during her 2008 presidential run threatened to “totally obliterate” Iran with nuclear weapons. As Secretary of State under Obama, she participated in the overthrow of the democratic government of Honduras. Her contribution to the destruction of Libya in 2011 was almost gleeful and is known to the entire world. Her tacit support to Israel and Saudi Arabia has given birth to ISIS. Saudi Arabia wants to hurt its arch enemy Iran and Israel wants to createGreater Israelby occupying land of other countries.

    One of Clinton’s closest allies is Madeleine Albright, the former Secretary of State, who has been attacking young women for not supporting “Hillary”. This is the same Madeleine Albright who infamously celebrated on TV the death of half a million Iraqi children as “worth it”. Then Huma Mahmood Abedin a Saudi mole since 1996 is serving as Hillary’s “body woman,” a sort of glorified personal maid, gentle confidant. Under Hillary advanced her carrier to unprecedented heights including job at state department. At present serving as Vice Chairwomen for Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign for President!

    In 2010 Huma married a Jewish then US Congressman Anthony Weiner and wedding ceremonies were performed by Bill Clinton. Huma was born to an Indian father and Pakistani mother in America and when she was 2 years old the family migrated to Saudi Arabia and at the age of 18 she came to study in America and right away became an intern at White House. Her family still lives in Saudi Arabia. Above all Hillary represents systemic corruption and moral failings that define her who would gladly sell out our country to the highest bidder.

    Clintons are running their Foundation as their personal piggy bank and taking money from Muslim Countries and organizations specializing to spread sharia laws with least regards to their record on human rights and inhuman treatment to women. On the other hand Trump says the invasion of Iraq was a crime; he doesn’t want to go to war with Russia and China. He will stay neutral in the conflict between Israel and Palestine. He says America has no business to change regimes or toppling leaders of other countries, exporting democracy and building other nations after destroying them.

    Trump is anti-Pakistan and pro India. Trump is for legal immigration and he wants to simplify rules for family immigration visa. More over those who come here from India for professional studies in prestigious universities as students, Trump wants to give them green cards. On top of that Trump is not financed by Israeli or Saudi lobby or arms companies or defense contractors or the Wall Street or the billionaires club. The danger to the Americans and rest of the peace loving countries is not Trump, but Clinton. Trump is the only candidate that is able to deliver on the economy, rebuilding America and immigration promises because his campaign is not financed by any special interest group.

    This election is not about Trump or Republican party or Democratic party. This is about the future of every American. This is an historic, unprecedented and exciting movement as well as a fight in which Trump on behalf of the American voters has challenged; The Elite, The Power Brokers, The Billionaire Donors Club & their dubious Super PAC’s financed with dirty money. They are trying to dictate the voters who to vote for and are trying to trample the voters’ intent, those who have already voted for Trump in primaries. 2/3 of the Republicans as well as 2/3 of the Democrat voters want an outsider not an establishment supported career politician. The proof is when Trump started his campaign he was at 14% in the polls and now he is at 41.7%. vs Hillary’s 42.5% in National Polling average. He created a history by polling more than 14 million votes in the Republican Primaries. Trump is the anti-politician, the anti-elite, the anti-establishment candidate Americans have been waiting for a long time.

    Trump as a wild-card candidate with unpredictable pockets of support, potentially capable of changing the political landscape even late in the election season.In the end Trump will win the general election to be the next President of America by defeating the establishment nominee a carrier politician Hillary Clinton since 1976 with not a single achievement being marketed on a budget of over $3 billion by a convincing margin. Americans are looking for a strong President in the White House not the 2 co-Presidents living with the ghost of President Obama in the White House.

    Trump will correct the imbalances created by carrier politicians by signing bad trade dealsto hurt Americans to favor their donors. He will create better business opportunities to create more jobs. This will benefit every American, especially the highly educated and affluent community Indian-American community. Their living standards and wages will improve and India will also benefit under Trump presidency with a preferred nation status.

    (The views expressed are author’s own. The author is Secretary, INDIAN-AMERICANS FOR
    TRUMP 2016 (Registered as a PAC with FEC) 11 Pinewood Lane ● Warren, New Jersey ● 07059)

  • WHY TRUMP’S CRAZY TALK ABOUT OBAMA AND ISIS MATTERS

    WHY TRUMP’S CRAZY TALK ABOUT OBAMA AND ISIS MATTERS

    On Thursday, August 11 morning, Donald Trump doubled down on his latest verbal outrage: the claim that President Obama was the “founder” of ISIS Actually, the Republican Presidential nominee tripled down. Appearing on CNBC’s “Squawk Box,” he described himself as “a truth teller” and went on to say that the President was “the founder of ISISabsolutely, the way he removed our troops.” Referring to Hillary Clinton, Trump added, “I call them co-founders.”

    Peripatetic as ever, Trump gave another interview, a short time later, to Hugh Hewitt, the conservative radio host, who said to him, “Last night, you said that the President was the founder of ISIS. I know what you meant. You meant that he created the vacuum, he lost the peace.”

    Trump wasn’t having it. “No. I meant that he’s the founder of ISIS,” he said. “He was the most valuable player. I gave him the Most Valuable Player award. I give her”-Clinton-“too, by the way.” Hewitt evidently thought that this was unfair to Obama. “But he’s not sympathetic to them,” he said. “He hates them; he’s trying to kill them.” Trump was unabashed. “He was the founder,” he said, referring to Obama. “His, the way he got out of Iraq, that was the founding of ISIS.”

    What are we to make of all this? At this stage, some will argue that it isn’t worth the effort to interpret Trump’s misstatements, or to point out the truth of the matter-in this case, that a Jordanian named Abu Musab al-Zarqawi founded ISIS, in 2004. At the very least, it should be obvious to everyone by now that Trump doesn’t deal in reality; he deals in mythmaking, demagoguery, and carnival barking.

    When he’s not tied to a teleprompter, Trump often seems to say the most provocative thing that comes into his head, with little thought for the consequences for his campaign, or for the campaigns of other Republicans. He’s like a small child, trying to be the center of attention, even if that means he has turned himself into an object of outrage and ridicule.

    If you take this view of Trump, there isn’t much more to be said. He’s the melting figure on the cover of this weeks’ Time magazine: a reality-television shyster who somehow captured the nomination of a major political party and is now dissolving in front of us. The only remaining questions for you are how big a majority Clinton will rack up, and whether the Republicans can limit the damage in the Senate and the House of Representatives.

    I’ve got a lot of sympathy for this interpretation. But, just for the sake of argument, let’s assume that Trump is smarter and less myopic than he seems. Let’s assume that what he’s really focused on isn’t winning this year’s election, a task he now realizes is beyond him, but creating a long-term Trumpian movement. A nationalistic, nativist, protectionist, and authoritarian movement that will forever be associated with him, but which also has the capacity to survive beyond him. A movement that in some ways would resemble other right-wing political parties around the world, such as France’s National Front, Austria’s Freedom Party, and the U.K. Independence Party, but which would also harken back to earlier moments in American history, such as the rise of the anti-immigrant Know Nothing movement of the eighteen-forties, and the formation, a century later, of the isolationist America First Committee, which sought a negotiated peace with Hitler.

    If establishing such a following, and bringing about a historic realignment on the right, was Trump’s real intention-rather than moving into the Oval Office next January-some of what he has been saying lately would be more comprehensible. Not more accurate or less odious, but more explicable on its own terms.

    History tells us that for right-wing populist movements to succeed, a number of things need to be in place. For one thing, they need a narrative that mainstream political leaders, and political parties, are guilty of not merely incompetence but betrayal. The most notorious example is the “stab-in-the-back” myth, widely believed in Germany after 1918. That narrative held that the German military didn’t really lose the First World War; the soldiers were betrayed by traitorous civilian politicians who signed an armistice. Later examples include the conviction in French conservative circles, during the nineteen-sixties, that Charles de Gaulle, in giving up Algeria, had betrayed France, and the accusation, thirty years later, that François Mitterrand and other French leaders had turned their backs on la Mère-Patrie by supporting the Maastricht Treaty, which created the European Union.

    Trump has been arguing for months that the Obama Administration, in withdrawing almost all U.S. troops from Iraq, helped bring about the conditions that enabled ISIS to seize territory and create a self-styled caliphate. (He fails to point out that the Bush Administration initiated the troop withdrawal.) He first suggested that Obama and Clinton created ISIS seven months ago, long before this week’s comments. At a rally in January, he said, “They’ve created ISIS. Hillary Clinton created ISIS with Obama.”

    At the time, Trump’s comments attracted some attention and criticism, but not very much. His principal adversaries then were his rivals in the Republican primary, and there was something of a competition going on to demonize Obama and Clinton. In returning to this sort of language now that he’s got the nomination-and escalating it with his use of the phrase “founder of ISIS”-Trump is, on the face of it, harming his prospects for November. He certainly doesn’t sound like he’s trying to win over the soccer moms in Columbus, or the office workers in Tampa, that he needs to win the election. He sounds like he is talking to his angry base, and supplying them with an inflammatory narrative that can be trotted out for years, and decades, to come. It’s a tactic that politicians outside the United States, such as Jean-Marie Le Pen and Jörg Haider, have used to good effect in building up far-right nationalist movements.

    Then there are Trump’s increasingly frequent references to the likelihood of his losing in November, and to the possibility that foul play will be responsible. “I’m afraid the election’s gonna be rigged, I have to be honest,” he told a rally in Ohio, on August 1st. A day later, talking to Fox News’s Sean Hannity, Trump returned to the theme, saying, “I’m telling you, November 8th, we’d better be careful because that election is going to be rigged. And I hope the Republicans are watching closely or it’s going to be taken away from us.”

    It is, of course, a staple of extremist parties of the left and right that democracy is a sham, and that elections count for nothing. And once you have delegitimized an election result, or an elected leader, you can justify all sorts of extra-electoral, and indeed anti-democratic, actions.

    In the wake of Trump’s remarks, some commentators pointed this out. “Suggesting an election is going to be stolen, this is Third World dictatorship stuff,” CNN’s Brian Stelter said. “The problem for Trump is that his supporters believe what he says,” Vox’s Dara Lind wrote. “If he says a Trump loss means the election has been stolen, there are millions of people prepared to believe it.” Just as there are many people who are willing to believe-or to internalize and accept, anyway-that Obama created ISIS, even though it was founded four years before he came to office.

    So is this what Trump is up to-diligently seeking to create an enduring America First movement that will eventually supplant the Republican Party? I wouldn’t give him that much credit. He’s precisely the self-centered, shortsighted, and insecure figure he appears to be, and he’s now flailing around for excuses to explain a humiliating defeat in the making. In his interview with CNBC, he said, “If, at the end of ninety days, I’ve fallen short . . . it’s O.K. I go back to a very good way of life.”

    But even if Trump is just along for the ride, that doesn’t excuse what he is doing. Four years from now, or eight years from now, a more disciplined and self-controlled figure could take up where he left off. If at that time the United States were facing a serious economic or national-security crisis, more Americans-conceivably even a majority of them-might be willing to accept the argument that regular politicians have failed and betrayed them, and that drastic measures are called for. Healthy democracies don’t decay overnight. They gradually rot from within, with termites like Trump undermining their foundations.

    (Source: newyorker.com)

  • Slain Sikh Marine’s Family Hurt by Donald Trump’s Remarks About Khans

    Slain Sikh Marine’s Family Hurt by Donald Trump’s Remarks About Khans

    LOS ANGELES (TIP): Voicing support for a fallen Pakistani-origin American soldier’s parents who had come under attack from Donald Trump, the family of a slain Sikh Marine has said they were “hurt” by his remarks and it amounted to playing “political games.”

    Five years after he was shot to death by enemy fighters in Afghanistan, Marine Cpl. Gurpreet Singh’s bedroom is still decorated in red, white and blue and his dress uniform hangs in his closet with medals pinned to it.

    His father, Nirmal Singh, keeps a poster on a wall in his home in Antelope, Calif., calling the corporal an American hero. Singh and his family have spent much of the past week watching the immigrant parents of another fallen military service member spar with Republican presidential candidate Trump.

    “It hurts. I don’t know why. It’s like they’re playing political games with a Gold Star family,” Nirmal told The Sacramento Bee.

    Gold Star families are immediate relatives of U.S. Armed Forces members who died in battle or in support of certain military activities.

    Many military families around the country have been surprised by Trump’s criticism of the parents of the late Army Captain Humayun Khan after they endorsed Democratic presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton and rebuked the Republican presidential candidate at the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia last month.

    Trump’s tactics drew condemnation from leaders of the groups Veterans of Foreign Wars and Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America. Gold Star Wives and the grief-counseling nonprofit Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors also stepped in to criticize the business tycoon.

    The Singhs identify with the Khans, a Muslim family of Pakistani descent, who, like them, lost a proud son to their adopted nation’s long wars.

    Nirmal Singh noted that he has often met other immigrants when he gets in touch with Marines.

    “Religion does not matter. They love their country. That’s why they go and they should be respected,” Nirmal said.

    Unlike Trump, the Singhs did not question why Captain Khan’s mother stood silent at the convention next to her husband, Khizr.

    Cpl. Gurpreet Singh’s mother, Satnam Kaur, likely would do the same.

    “When (Trump) said something about (Capt. Khan’s) mother, that insulted my mother,” Cpl. Singh’s 28-year-old sister, Manpreet Kaur, was quoted as saying.

    However, the election has also resulted in military families turning against each other.

    “It’s like they’re trying to divide even Gold Star families. We should be united,” Manpreet said.

  • Trump calls Obama founder of ISIS and Hillary Clinton the co-founder

    Trump calls Obama founder of ISIS and Hillary Clinton the co-founder

    SUNRISE, FLORIDA (TIP): “They honor President Obama,” he told a rally inSunrise, Florida on Wednesday, August 10. “He is the founder of Isis “.

    Trump also attacked his Democratic rival for the White House, Hillary Clinton, calling her a “co-founder”.

    Hillary responded by accusing him of “trash-talking” the US and echoing the talking points of Russian President Vladimir Putin. Trump stood by his remarks on Thursday, August 11, using a sports phrase to say Obama and Clinton were the Islamic State’s “most valuable players”.

    The Republican presidential nominee has endured 10 days of negative headlines after a string of controversial comments.

    Most recently, he appeared to urge his supporters to take up arms against Clinton to stop her from appointing liberal judges to the US Supreme Court if she wins the election.

    The hotel developer-turned-politician denied he was inciting violence, but the daughter of former President Ronald Reagan, who was shot in 1981, condemned his “verbal violence”.

    Trump’s unfounded off the cuff comments have received wide disapproval, including from Republican politicians who are increasingly getting worried that Trump’s adventures with his tongue may alienate voters and bring them suffering.

    IS can trace its roots back to the late Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, a Jordanian who formed al-Qaeda in Iraq (AQI) after the US-led invasion in 2003. It became a major force in the insurgency, carrying out dozens of attacks a month.

    After Zarqawi’s death in 2006, AQI created a militant umbrella organization, Islamic State in Iraq (ISI). Over the next four years, it was steadily weakened by a US troop surge and Sunni Arab tribal fighters who rejected its brutality.

    Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi became leader in 2010 and began rebuilding ISI. The following year, ISI joined the rebellion in Syria, which offered it a safe haven and easy access to weapons, some of them supplied by US allies opposed to President Bashar al-Assad.

    The group also exploited withdrawal of US troops from Iraq at the end of 2011 and widespread Sunni anger at the sectarian policies of the country’s Shia-led government.

    ISI changed its name to Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (Isis or Isil) in 2013 and began seizing territory in Syria. In 2014, Isis overran large swathes of northern and western Iraq, proclaimed the creation of a “caliphate”, and became Islamic State.

    The White House has not commented on the “IS founder” claim but a spokesman for Clinton said: “This is another example of Donald Trump trash-talking the United States.

    “What’s remarkable about Trump’s comments is that once again, he’s echoing the talking points of Putin and our adversaries to attack American leaders and American interests, while failing to offer any serious plans to confront terrorism or make this country more secure.”

    In recent weeks, several leading Republicans have deserted Trump over his outspoken attacks.

    Most recently, Senator Susan Collins said she would not be voting for him, pointing to a time he seemed to mock a disabled journalist.

    Time Magazine on Thursday reported that the chairman of the Republican National Committee, Reince Priebus, had threatened to withdraw funding from the Trump campaign, and instead direct it to Congressional campaigns.

    Trump denies that this conversation ever took place.

    Polls suggest support for the embattled candidate has been falling in key battleground states in recent weeks.

  • Dems Apply More Pressure on GOP ‘Cowards’ Endorsing Trump

    Dems Apply More Pressure on GOP ‘Cowards’ Endorsing Trump

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Sen. Harry Reid of Nevada called Republicans supporting presidential nominee Donald Trump “cowards” and called for Republican Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell to withdraw his endorsement, in a statement Thursday, August 4.

    The statement, as reported by the Washington Examiner, comes amid a tumultuous week for Trump that has led Democratic leaders to put his supporters in an awkward position to have to defend his controversial statements or denounce their partisan endorsement. McConnell is the latest target for this strategy.

    “Again and again, Donald Trump has proven himself unfit for the presidency,” the Senate minority leader said. “But instead of standing up to him, Sen. McConnell has spent months enabling this unstable hatemonger. This is no surprise – Sen. McConnell has done more to enable Trump than any other Republican elected official. Indeed, Sen. McConnell has been Trump’s most important enabler.

    “Even before Trump, Republican leaders had already hollowed out the core of their party by abandoning ideas and looking the other way when hateful rhetoric suited their political purposes. Trump learned the worst of politics from watching them, and instead of standing for what is right, Republicans like Sen. McConnell are marching behind him.

    “Republicans who continue to support Trump are cowards. They have put political party over the good of their nation. Sen. McConnell is failing this critical test of leadership. He should demonstrate common decency by withdrawing his support for Trump.”

    McConnell has a dislike for Trump while endorsing the candidate in the name of keeping the GOP unified, according to the Washington Examiner

  • The Russian Angle in US Elections – What we know so far…

    The Russian Angle in US Elections – What we know so far…

    The intrusion into the Democratic National Committee’s computers, allegedly by Russian hackers, has put a renewed spotlight on Donald Trump’s connections to Russia and its leader, Vladimir Putin.

    Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton has slammed Donald Trump for his “absolute allegiance” to Russia that raises “national security” concerns, prompting her Republican rival to deny having any “relationship” with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

    “We know that Donald Trump has shown a very troubling willingness to back up Putin, to support Putin, whether it’s saying that NATO wouldn’t come to the rescue of allies if they were invaded, talking about removing sanctions from Russian officials after they were imposed by the US and Europe together, because of Russia’s aggressiveness in Crimea and Ukraine, his praise for Putin which is I think quite remarkable,” she said.

    “And for Trump to both encourage that and to praise Putin despite what appears to be a deliberate effort to try to affect the election I think raises national security issues,” the Democratic presidential nominee alleged.

    She also said that Trump has absolute allegiance to Russia.

    Last week, Trump during a news conference had appeared to have asked Russia to find out the missing 30,000 emails of Clinton and release them.

    Trump later said he was just kidding and being sarcastic. Clinton, however, did not appear to be convinced by that clarification.

    “I think if you take his encouragement that the Russians hack into American e-mail accounts, if you take his quite excessive praise for Putin, his absolute allegiance to a lot of Russian wish-list foreign policy position, his effort then to try to distance himself from that backlash which rightly came not just from Democrats, but Republicans, independents and national security and intelligence experts leads us once again to include he is not temperamentally fit to be president and commander in chief,” Clinton said.

    I have no relationship with Putin: Donald Trump

    Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump said he has no relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin as being alleged by his opponents.

    “I have no relationship with him (Putin),” Trump said, adding that he had praised him the in the past because he had said some nice things about him.

    “He said very nice things about me, but I have no relationship with him. I don’t — I’ve never met him,” Trump said.

    “I mean he treats me … with great respect. I have no relationship with Putin. I don’t think I’ve ever met him. I never met him. I don’t think I’ve ever met him,” Trump reiterated.

    The real estate mogul said he has never spoken to Putin on the phone.

    “When we had the Miss Universe contest a number of years ago, we had Miss Universe in Moscow, in the Moscow area, he was invited. He wanted to come. He wasn’t able to come. That would have been a time when I would have met him,” he said.

    However, Trump insisted that there is nothing wrong in having a good relationship with Russia.

    “If our country got along with Russia, that would be a great thing … But if we can have a good relationship with Russia and if Russia would help us get rid of ISIS, frankly, as far as I’m concerned, you’re talking about tremendous amounts of money and lives and everything else, that would be a positive thing, not a negative thing,” Trump said.

    He also attacked his Democratic rival Hillary Clinton, calling her a dishonest person with a bad temperament.

    “She’s a very dishonest person. I have one of the great temperaments. I have a winning temperament. She has a bad temperament. She’s weak. We need a strong temperament and that’s all it is, I have a strong temperament,” Trump told ABC News in an interview.

    Appearing on a Sunday talk show, Trump claimed that he is leading in polls and is headed to win general elections in November.

    “I think I have a great temperament. I beat 16 very talented people in and I’ve never done this before. You don’t do that with a bad temperament. I’m leading her in the polls,” he said and alleged that Clinton She doesn’t know how to win.

    “She’s not a winner. She doesn’t know how to win … I had a flawless campaign … She could barely beat Bernie,” he said.

    Trump’s earlier comments suggesting a relationship with Putin

    Here are four occasions between 2013 and 2015 when Trump touted his ties to Putin.

    • When Thomas Roberts of MSNBC asked Trump, “Do you have a relationship with Vladimir Putin? A conversational relationship or anything that you feel you have sway or influence over his government?” Trump responded, “I do have a relationship, and I can tell you that he’s very interested in what we’re doing here today. He’s probably very interested in what you and I am saying today, and I’m sure he’s going to be seeing it in some form.” — interview, November, 2013
    • “You know, I was in Moscow a couple of months ago. I own the Miss Universe Pageant and they treated me so great. Putin even sent me a present, a beautiful present.” — address at the CPAC conference, March 2014
    • “Russia does not respect our country any longer. They see we’ve been greatly weakened, both militarily and otherwise, and he certainly does not respect President Obama. So what I would do—as an example, I own Miss Universe, I was in Russia, I was in Moscow recently and I spoke, indirectly and directly, with President Putin, who could not have been nicer, and we had a tremendous success. The show was live from Moscow, and we had tremendous success there and it was amazing, but to do well, you have to get the other side to respect you, and he does not respect our president, which is very sad.” — address at the National Press Club, May 2014
    • “As far as the Ukraine is concerned … if Putin wants to go in — and I got to know him very well because we were both on 60 Minutes. We were stablemates, and we did very well that night.” — portion of an answer at the Fox Business News debate, Nov. 2015. (The notion that the two men appeared together on 60 Minutes has been debunked. As Time magazine put it succinctly, “In fact, they weren’t even on the same continent.”)
  • Who will win and why?

    Who will win and why?

    Right now (July), polls suggest that Hillary Clinton will win the presidential election, but I think Donald Trump actually has a much better chance of winning than most people seem to think.

    Donald Trump would be a truly terrible president, but he is getting support because he is tapping into fears held by the white middle class that are genuine. Fears about income inequality. Fears about control of government by elites. Fears about good jobs moving to a small number of cities with unaffordable housing. Fears about large scale immigration of people from a different culture putting at risk an existing culture that many people value. Fears that the country is being controlled by a group of people who dehumanize them as “bigots”.

    Media’s Role: To diffuse those fears, Hillary Clinton needs to convince the middle class that she really does care about their concerns, but her cautious approach to the media has prevented her getting that message across. Donald Trump has shown that in the new media world, the best way to reach voters is via the media, rather than via advertising. However the media will only carry your message if it at least somewhat controversial. Hillary Clinton has so far taken a “play it safe” approach in what she says, which means that the media rarely quotes her and few people know what she thinks.

    Hillary’s failure to tell people who she is has allowed Donald Trump to define her by caricature. Since Hillary rarely says anything controversial enough to get quoted, the only information people have about her are the misleading claims made by her opponents. This has created a false impression that Hillary Clinton is dishonest and doesn’t care about the middle class.

    Trump is a master salesman, and is using the same skills to sell his presidency as he used to sell Trump University, Trump Steaks, and Trump Casinos. In all cases, the actual product was terrible for the people who bought it, but Trump was able to convince people that he had the product that would solve all their problems. So long as Trump is able to stoke up fears about (real or imagined) problems, and convince people that he has solutions, there is a real risk that he could win – even if his promised solutions are make-believe.

    Democrats are being lulled into a false sense of security by the same experts who thought Trump had no chance of winning the GOP primary. Trump is running to win, not to govern, and definitely not to serve the interests of his party. This has caused him to run a very different kind of campaign, which analysts fail to properly understand. In addition, the fact that Trump is so divisive means that it’s likely that many people who plan to vote for Trump are unwilling to say that to a pollster.

    What makes Trump so dangerous is that he isn’t actually running because he wants to “make America great again”, but simply because he wants to win. This means that he is prepared to do things that a more conventional candidate would not be prepared to do if it increases his chance of winning – such as stoking up irrational anger, claiming to have solutions that he knows have no realistic chance of succeeding, and blatantly lying. I don’t think Donald Trump really cares about what would actually happen to America after he won, and that makes him a very risky candidate to campaign against.

    Hillary Clinton would be a vastly better president than Donald Trump, but Trump is a better salesman. The biggest thing that Hillary needs to do is reassure people who would otherwise vote for Trump that she respects them and cares deeply about the things that concern them.

    Don’t demonize Trump supporters – Trump’s supporters are not bad people, or “bigots”. They are decent people, with genuine concerns, being led astray by a man who is selling them a make-believe story about “bad people” and “simple solutions”. If she wants his supporters to vote for her, then she needs to convince them that she respects them. 

    Assure Trump’s supporters that she cares about their concerns – Trump gets the support he does because he taps into fears that are legitimate. Fears about the decline of the middle class. Fears about control of government by elites that don’t understand the concerns of the middle class. Fears about large-scale immigration from people with a different culture putting at risk an existing culture that people value. I believe Hillary Clinton does care about these issues, but that message is not being heard in the media.

    Say things that are surprising enough to get media coverage – Donald Trump has demonstrated that in the new media landscape the best way to reach voters is through the media, rather than through advertising. However, the media will only carry your message if it is at least somewhat controversial. Hillary has so far taken a “play it safe” approach in what she says, which means that the media rarely quotes her, creating the risk that Trump can define who Hillary is through caricature. 

    Put a wedge between Donald Trump and his supporters – Find areas where the views and actions of Trump are clearly misaligned with the views of his supporters – and push on them. Make it clear that she is supporting the middle class against Trump, rather than opposing both Trump and his supporters.

    Put forward an inspirational vision of the future, including for Trump’s supporters – People vote for Trump because they are worried about the future and think that they need to “push the eject button” in order to avoid catastrophe. To prevent that, she needs to reassure them that they have an exciting future to look forward to, including the expectation that the issues Trump is making them afraid of will be addressed.

  • Fox News Poll: Hillary Leads Trump by 10 Points

    Fox News Poll: Hillary Leads Trump by 10 Points

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Though 62 percent of poll respondents say they see Clinton as dishonest, they nevertheless view the former secretary of state as more qualified for the highest office in the land than the brash, billionaire businessman.

    A new Fox News poll shows Democrat Hillary Clinton leading Republican Donald Trump by 10 points.
    A new Fox News poll shows Democrat Hillary Clinton
    leading Republican Donald Trump by 10 points.

    Clinton leads Trump 49 percent to 39 percent in the latest poll, the first taken since both candidates named their running mates last month. The difference falls outside the poll’s 3-point margin of error.

    When Libertarian Gary Johnson is included, Clinton’s lead is cut to 9 points, with Clinton at 44 and Trump at 35. Johnson pulls 12 percent of the vote.

    Among the poll’s findings:

    Qualified:
    Clinton: 65 percent,
    Trump: 43 percent
    Right temperament:
    Clinton: 64 percent
    Trump: 37 percent
    Knowledge to serve effectively:
    Clinton: 72 percent
    Trump: 40 percent

    Trump does have more support from veterans (53-39) but Clinton draws more Republicans (12 percent) than Trump draws Democrats (5 percent.)

    The poll talked to 1,022 randomly chosen registered voters nationwide by telephone July 31-August 2.

  • Russian Spies answer Trumps call ~ Hack Hillary Clinton’s Presidential Campaign

    Russian Spies answer Trumps call ~ Hack Hillary Clinton’s Presidential Campaign

    Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign along with other Democratic Party organisations has been hacked as part of a larger cyber attack, law enforcement officials said on Friday night.

    The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Justice Department has launched a probe against the latest hack that follows two data breaches involving the Democratic National Committee (DNC) and the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DNCC), CNN reported.

    “An analytics data programme maintained by the DNC, and used by our campaign and a number of other entities, was accessed as part of the DNC hack,” said Clinton campaign spokesman Nick Merrill.

    “Our campaign computer system has been under review by outside cyber security experts. To date, they have found no evidence that our internal systems have been compromised,” CNN quoted Merrill as saying

    The intrusion was discovered by private investigators hired by the campaign, according to the law enforcement officials.

    The private investigators believed that it was similar to the DNC hack, but federal investigators were still working to determine the scope and nature of the intrusion, the officials said.

    The Justice Department’s national security division, which was already investigating the DNC intrusion, is handling the probe because of the believed similarities, CNN reported citing the officials as saying.

    The DCCC, which is the political arm for House Democrats, confirmed on Friday it had been the subject of a cyberhack, raising the possibility that alleged Russian hackers might have breached a much broader swath of Democratic records than originally thought.

    The revelation comes just days after the leak of thousands of Democratic National Committee emails — US officials allege Russian hackers — prompted major turmoil within the party, causing the abrupt resignation of its chairwoman, Representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz, reports CNN.

    The FBI’s chief of cyber investigations James Trainor told CNN in an interview recently that hackers have targeted political party entities and think tanks in Washington.

    The official said there is a long list of intrusions that the FBI and other agencies were also investigating.

    Hacking has become a major flashpoint in the presidential race. Revelations about targeting the Clinton campaign come as the two nominees — Republican party’s Donald Trump) are set to begin receiving national security briefings, CNN noted.

    Trump earlier in the week drew criticism for appearing to suggest that Russia should use espionage to find Hillary Clinton’s deleted emails.

    The Republican nominee later tried to walk back the comments by saying that he was only being sarcastic.