Donald Trump, tongue-in-cheek, said Thursday that he’d accept the results of the November election “if I win.”
Donald Trump, tongue-in-cheek, said Thursday that he’d accept the results of the November election “if I win.”
Clinton condemned the incident on Twitter on Sunday evening.
OPINION
AMONG the many telling kernels of truth dappling the spoor of the Hillary Clinton campaign’s internal e-mails released by WikiLeaks this past week, this one immediately leapt out.
The attack on a UN humanitarian aid convoy near Aleppo, Syria, last month, which Washington has blamed on Russia, was actually carried out by one of the terrorist groups present in the area, the Russian president has said.
DONALD Trump says that Republican House Speaker Paul Ryan and other party members are hurting his campaign more than Hillary Clinton.
Supporters of the Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump take it as a given that the media are backing his opponent Hillary Clinton. They may have a point too, as most major US newspapers have either denounced Trump or openly endorsed the Democrat.
IT will be seen as the ultimate test, one Hillary Clinton hopes Donald Trump will fail spectacularly.
Donald Trump was likened to a "fool or maniac" while Hillary Clinton was dismissed as "weak and feckless" in a punchy vice-presidential debate.
The press conference was highly-anticipated, particularly by the Clinton opposition, after former Trump campaign adviser Roger Stone tweeted earlier this week:
When Hillary Clinton’s blue-tinged 737 touched down in Ohio on Monday morning for the first time in 29 days, locals greeted a changed Democratic nominee in a much changed race
Hillary Clinton is surging in the first poll released after one of Donald Trump's roughest weeks on the campaign trail.
Facing off against Kate McKinnon as she impersonated Democratic hopeful Hillary Clinton, Baldwin delivered an orange-faced, blustery impression of her GOP rival.
Trump had called Machado "Miss Piggy" and "'Miss Housekeeping,' because she was Latina," Clinton said.
For about the thousandth time this year, the headlines portrayed Trump as a political Gulliver bound finally in ropes and about to crash to earth once and for all.
On that front, one survey released Tuesday offered some good news for Clinton.
HILLARY Clinton may have won yesterday’s debate, but if this projection is anything to go by she isn’t winning the election war.
The Republican candidate for White House appeared to use an unusual adverb in his debate against Hillary Clinton. Or did he? Jon Kelly investigates.
Susan Page of USA TODAY gives her five takeaways from the first debate between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. USA TODAY
Monday night's US presidential debate between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump could be the most-watched political event in decades.
FOR once, it’s not her revealing outfits or famous booty that’s breaking the internet.