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Move along, nothing to see here. Everything about his campaign is moving along like a well oiled machine, right, Sick Brit Twit?:pointer:Stop-SS--cheersgif:thumbsup2::nohead:

Donald Trump Fires Corey Lewandowski, His Campaign Manager

By MAGGIE HABERMANJUNE 20, 2016

Donald J. Trump has fired his contentious campaign manager, Corey Lewandowski, a move that comes as the presumptive Republican nominee faces challenges as he heads into the general election.
Mr. Lewandowski could not immediately be reached for comment about his departure, which was announced by the campaign.
“The Donald J. Trump Campaign for President, which has set a historic record in the Republican primary having received almost 14 million votes, has today announced that Corey Lewandowski will no longer be working with the campaign,” the campaign spokeswoman, Hope Hicks, said in a statement. “The campaign is grateful to Corey for his hard work and dedication and we wish him the best in the future.”
With the Republican National Convention looming next month, Mr. Trump is facing the task of broadening his team to include people with previous presidential campaign experience. Mr. Trump also has been turning his attention to fund-raising for the first time, a task that Mr. Lewandowski had assumed oversight of and one that has gone slowly for the campaign. The campaign has aired no ads in the general election and there has been no “super PAC” that received a clear public blessing from Mr. Trump and his top advisers.
The loss of Mr. Lewandowski was intended as part of a larger shift toward the final sprint of the race, according to those briefed on the matter.
Mr. Trump had faced increasing concerns from allies and donors, as well as his children, about the next phase of the campaign. It is a move that could reassure donors and Republicans more broadly that he can adjust toward a November election strategy.
Two people briefed on the move, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said that Mr. Lewandowski was fired.
The campaign manager was seen as having a hostile relationship with many members of the national press corps who cover Mr. Trump, and many officials at the Republican National Committee had strained relationships with him.
And Mr. Lewandowski was often at odds with Mr. Trump’s chief strategist, Paul Manafort, who was brought on in March when the candidate seemed poised for a lengthy fight over delegates.
Mr. Lewandowski was said to have resisted certain moves that would have increased the number of staff members, at times blocking Mr. Manafort from making hires or later undoing them.
But the people briefed on Mr. Lewandowski’s departure said that the circumstances went well beyond any particular episode or any particular relationship. Mr. Lewandowski had a penchant for making headlines about himself that overshadowed his boss, including being charged with misdemeanor battery, a charge later dropped, after he was accused of grabbing a reporter as she approached Mr. Trump with a question in Jupiter, Fla., on March 8, a night when the candidate won three of four Republican state primary votes.
One person stressed that the move had been in the works for many weeks, particularly since it became clear that Mr. Trump would be the nominee. The person added said that the campaign is now focusing on bringing the party together, including hiring new staff members and adjusting to the race against Hillary Clinton. And there had been a desire for many weeks to make changes ahead of the Republican National Convention, July 18-21 in Cleveland.
Mr. Lewandowski, 42, a New Hampshire resident with deep ties to the state, had made himself a delegate to the convention months ago. He is still the chairman of the state’s delegation to the convention.
No one inside the campaign was given any advance warning about the dismissal of Mr. Lewandowski, who was on the campaign’s daily 8:30 a.m. conference call on Monday, according to a person briefed on the developments.
On Twitter, some campaign staff members rejoiced at the news of Mr. Lewandowski’s departure.
“Ding dong the witch is dead!” wrote Michael Caputo, a Trump communications aide who was said to have been antagonized by Mr. Lewandowski.
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[h=1]A JOURNALIST WENT TO A DONALD TRUMP RALLY YESTERDAY AND CAME BACK SHOCKED. HERE ARE HIS TWEETS[/h]WEDNESDAY 15 JUNE 15:55
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[FONT=&quot]
donald-trump-595x345.jpg

Most coverage of Donald Trump’s rallies are about people disrupting it. But one American journalist went there and quietly observed what was going on.
He came back shaken and scared.
Jared Yates Sexton is a writer and political correspondent from the state of Georgia.
Yesterday, Donald Trump held a rally in Greensboro, North Carolina. Sexton went there to cover the event, and wrote a series of tweets.
Here they are, in chronological order:


Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Trump event like a security state. Just watched a girl get denied for being "too alternative."
5:21 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

There's an ungodly amount of extremely drunk people here.
5:25 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Big seller is a shirt that says Trump That Bitch. Everyone wearing one is being asked to pose for pictures. Big thumbs up. Big grins.
5:28 PM - 14 Jun 2016



















Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Crowd chanting BUILD THAT WALL BUILD THAT WALL over operatic music.
6:04 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

I don't like Hitler comparisons but that was positively like Nuremburg rally level crazy.
6:08 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

People laughing about how pissed their sisters are going to be. "they deserve it"
6:10 PM - 14 Jun 2016



















Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

There's a protestor next to me and he's scared to death
6:21 PM - 14 Jun 2016



































Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Saying Orlando shooter shouldn't of been here as child of immigrants
7:02 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Increase military. Jobs. Refutation of immigrants and minorities.
7:09 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Bragging that he took credentials from WA Post. Crowd yells Kill them all.
7:12 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Says Obama lousy president, can't repeat what I'm hearing in the crowd
7:16 PM - 14 Jun 2016



















Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Trump says "take care of our protestor, don't huuuurt him, take him home to mommy"
7:24 PM - 14 Jun 2016



















Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Trump says not to hurt protestor, several chant HURT HIM HURT HIM
7:26 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Calls Elizabeth Warren Pocahontas, says he was asked to apologized, will only apologize to Pocahontas. Guy next to me does a war dance
7:43 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Rally ends. Crowd on way mumbling about immigrants. Vendors yelling HILLARY SUCKS BUT NOT LIKE MONICA. America. 2016.
7:52 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Just overheard: "you can't trust Latinos. Some maybe but not most"
7:53 PM - 14 Jun 2016



















Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

So much casual racism, misogyny, homophobia, and just plain ugliness.
8:12 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

People breaking beer bottles in parking lot, throwing them on ground and at passing cars
8:14 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Telling myself they're angry about the economy. About changing technology and industry. But there's so much base-level ugliness.
8:23 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Suv blaring I Am A Real American, waving Trump hats and flipping off homeless and car with Mexican flag. What reality is this
8:34 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Article tomorrow: there are members of Trump's coalition who've been waiting for years for an excuse to let their hate out.
9:18 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Clearing out of Greensboro. Thanks for the retweets and comments. Trump's candidacy is a virus that needs cured.
9:33 PM - 14 Jun 2016










Time to start worrying
[/FONT]
 

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A JOURNALIST WENT TO A DONALD TRUMP RALLY YESTERDAY AND CAME BACK SHOCKED. HERE ARE HIS TWEETS

WEDNESDAY 15 JUNE 15:55
Share Post
Tweet Post
donald-trump-595x345.jpg

Most coverage of Donald Trump’s rallies are about people disrupting it. But one American journalist went there and quietly observed what was going on.
He came back shaken and scared.
Jared Yates Sexton is a writer and political correspondent from the state of Georgia.
Yesterday, Donald Trump held a rally in Greensboro, North Carolina. Sexton went there to cover the event, and wrote a series of tweets.
Here they are, in chronological order:


Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Trump event like a security state. Just watched a girl get denied for being "too alternative."
5:21 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

There's an ungodly amount of extremely drunk people here.
5:25 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Big seller is a shirt that says Trump That Bitch. Everyone wearing one is being asked to pose for pictures. Big thumbs up. Big grins.
5:28 PM - 14 Jun 2016



















Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Crowd chanting BUILD THAT WALL BUILD THAT WALL over operatic music.
6:04 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

I don't like Hitler comparisons but that was positively like Nuremburg rally level crazy.
6:08 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

People laughing about how pissed their sisters are going to be. "they deserve it"
6:10 PM - 14 Jun 2016



















Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

There's a protestor next to me and he's scared to death
6:21 PM - 14 Jun 2016



































Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Saying Orlando shooter shouldn't of been here as child of immigrants
7:02 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Increase military. Jobs. Refutation of immigrants and minorities.
7:09 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Bragging that he took credentials from WA Post. Crowd yells Kill them all.
7:12 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Says Obama lousy president, can't repeat what I'm hearing in the crowd
7:16 PM - 14 Jun 2016



















Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Trump says "take care of our protestor, don't huuuurt him, take him home to mommy"
7:24 PM - 14 Jun 2016



















Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Trump says not to hurt protestor, several chant HURT HIM HURT HIM
7:26 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Calls Elizabeth Warren Pocahontas, says he was asked to apologized, will only apologize to Pocahontas. Guy next to me does a war dance
7:43 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Rally ends. Crowd on way mumbling about immigrants. Vendors yelling HILLARY SUCKS BUT NOT LIKE MONICA. America. 2016.
7:52 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Just overheard: "you can't trust Latinos. Some maybe but not most"
7:53 PM - 14 Jun 2016



















Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

So much casual racism, misogyny, homophobia, and just plain ugliness.
8:12 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

People breaking beer bottles in parking lot, throwing them on ground and at passing cars
8:14 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Telling myself they're angry about the economy. About changing technology and industry. But there's so much base-level ugliness.
8:23 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Suv blaring I Am A Real American, waving Trump hats and flipping off homeless and car with Mexican flag. What reality is this
8:34 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Article tomorrow: there are members of Trump's coalition who've been waiting for years for an excuse to let their hate out.
9:18 PM - 14 Jun 2016











Follow

Jared Yates Sexton @JYSexton

Clearing out of Greensboro. Thanks for the retweets and comments. Trump's candidacy is a virus that needs cured.
9:33 PM - 14 Jun 2016










Time to start worrying



A really silly post from a very silly person


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Hey, Scumbag, how many were at Frump's rally? 100,000? What, aren't you gonna post results from a poll taken more than a month ago again? No comment over that punk who manhandles women getting fired? Doesn't exactly sound like things are going well, does it? He's broke, relatively speaking, and Hillary is outspending him 24 mill to NOTHING in 8 battleground states-plus, there are rumblings that the backstabbing GOP is gonna try a coup at the Convention, lol. Yeah, things are goin' ACES for Herr Frump... :pointer:cheersgif:thumbsup2::nohead:
 

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Lizzie Warren DESTROYS The Idiot Drumpf AGAIN, and takes down Moron Scott Brown while she's at it.

Stop Elizabeth Warren effort by Clinton's favorite donors: Wall Street bid to nix left-winger as running mate


  • Wall Street bigs don't want Warren would bring her anti-corporate crusading into he White House if she were vice president
  • Hillary Clinton is under pressure to name Warren as her running mate to placate lefty Bernie Sanders backers
  • Both Warren and Clinton have said she's qualified for the job, and Warren has been trying out pointed attacks on Trump
  • Sanders hit Clinton during the campaign for her Wall Street ties – including speaking fees from Goldman Sachs
  • Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid reportedly wants Warren on the ticket
  • Other names floated on Hillary's list include Senators Tim Kaine, Cory Booker, and Sherrod Brown


By GEOFF EARLE, DEPUTY U.S. POLITICAL EDITOR FOR MAILONLINE.COM
PUBLISHED: 15:58, 20 June 2016 | UPDATED: 16:31, 20 June 2016



Wall Street bigs who support the Democratic Party are pushing back at the prospect that Hillary Clinton would name anti-corporate crusader Senator Elizabeth Warren as her running mate.
The donors are threatening to cut off financial support for Clinton if she named Warren to the powerful post.
'If Clinton picked Warren, her whole base on Wall Street would leave her,' a top donor who has raised millions for Clinton told Politico.
'They would literally just say, 'We have no qualms with you moving left, we understand all the things you've had to do because of Bernie Sanders, but if you are going there with Warren, we just can't trust you, you've killed it,' the donor added, without using their name.
A D.C. Democrat with banking industry ties pitched instead someone with dealmaker credentials in the mold of vice president Joe Biden.
'Clinton is going to face a divided government unless there is a total tsunami,' the Democrat said. 'What you want in a vice president is someone who can negotiate for you on the Hill, someone like Joe Biden. And that is not a Warren strength.'




357C414800000578-3650619-image-a-2_1466434476124.jpg

+4



The prospect of putting liberal Massachusetts senator Elizabeth Warren on the ticket is getting pushback from some Wall Street donors



.

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[h=6]- JUNE 18, 2016 -[/h][h=1]ORLANDO MASSACRE PROMPTS SOME IN LGBT COMMUNITY TO COME OUT—FOR TRUMP[/h]FOX News
The Orlando terror massacre has members of the LGBT community around the nation coming out – for Donald Trump and the Second Amendment.
Some among the reliable Democratic constituency were not persuaded by President Obama’s post-attack call for new gun control measures and renewed warning against painting Islam in a negative light.
Trump’s counter message that Americans – including those in the LGBT community - must protect themselves against the hatred of radical Muslims struck a chord with Stephen Zieman.
“I knew I had to fully support Trump because he called out the threat for what it was -- radical Islamic terrorism,” the 23-year-old from Schaumburg, Ill., told FoxNews.com. “He stood up for the LGBT community and called himself a friend. It's something we all needed and he was there — Hillary was not. She was making excuses for the religion and calling for gun control, which is not what I needed to hear.”
Zieman took to Twitter and announced that he was now voting for Trump. He was greeted by fellow supporters who welcomed him.
Zieman was not the only LGBT person impressed by Trump’s response to the tragedy and his intensified calls for the country to be tougher on extremism.
In Orlando, political activist and Trump supporter Randy Ross said he has been deluged with private messages on Facebook and his cell phone showing support for Trump.
“In the last three days, I would say there were no less than 50 requests to be added to our volunteer listing, but moreover, it’s been a gradual progression over the last few months,” he said, noting the influx was mostly gay men.
Ross came out as gay in 2002 in his 30s, but only switched his party affiliation to GOP a few years ago. As an outspoken Republican, he said people have both welcomed his beliefs as well as questioned them. When he visited the site of the shooting during a talk this week by outspoken gay Breitbart journalist Milo Yiannapolous, someone asked him, “Are you scared to be here?”
“I’m an openly gay man,” he said. “That in and of itself, as a Republican, to openly gay is not necessarily easy for a lot of people to understand. I’m not a one-voter issue. I’ve never been scared, not once, to be a gay man that’s openly supporting Donald Trump, but I could tell that was one of their fears.
“[Trump] has never come out and attacked the LGBT community,” he continued. “If you want your freedom to come together and to be protected, if you want all those things, he’s the right person to do that because I don’t believe that’s what we’re seeing on the Hillary Clinton side.”
On Twitter, Trump told his followers that he will fight for the LGBT community.
The support extends from Trump the candidate to his pro-Second Amendment message, renewing an old argument about whether the answer to gun crimes is fewer firearms in general, or more of them in the hands of law-abiding citizens who can respond to an attack.
Gay, pro-Second Amendment group the Pink Pistols saw its membership more than double to 3,500 in the days following the attack. Instead of calling for new gun control measures, Pink Pistols First Speaker Gwendolyn Patton repeated the gun rights mantra that more guns, not fewer, could have saved lives. She said groups going out for drinks should consider a “designated carrier” to pack heat and stay sober.
“It’s sad that we must consider such things, but when there are persons out there who mean us harm, we must find ways to protect ourselves within the law.” Patton said.
Gun stores have reported anecdotal evidence of a surge in gay people buyig firearms. Mike Smith, a firearms instructor in Colorado Springs, told Fox 31 he has witnessed the phenomenon first hand.
“I think right now because of what happened, people are looking for answers,” he told the station. “You walk into a gun shop and you expect to see people, frankly, who look like me. I think we forget we’re a country of all people, not just people who fit that predetermined mold.”
In California during the hours immediately following the Orlando attack, the LGBT community was shaken yet again by news that an armed man was arrested, possibly on his way to attack revelers at the Los Angeles Pride event. The suspect is now believed to be gay himself, and his motives remain unclear. But the incident coming so quickly on the heels of Orlando left the California LGBT community rattled.
“I went out Saturday night and when we saw the news in the morning, we’re just like, ‘Gosh, that could have been us,’” said Nestor Moto, vice president of the Log Cabin Republicans of Orange County. “On Sunday, someone tried to do that. It really hit us.”
Moto, 21, originally backed Chris Christie for the Republican presidential nomination. When the New Jersey governor dropped out in February, he turned his attention to Trump, especially when he spoke out against the North Carolina bathroom bill that would not allow transgender people to use the bathroom of their gender identity. He also noted past interviews with LGBT magazine The Advocate where he was in favor of gay rights.
Then, when Trump said the Orlando attack was the result of Islamic terrorism, Moto became even more excited about his campaign.
“I was very, very pleased with the fact that he finally said that Islamic terrorism is anti-gay, anti-women, anti-Jewish because we need to diagnose the problem in order to fix it and he’s the first one that has actively said that in a public forum like that,” he said. “It’s very refreshing to hear someone who isn’t afraid to say it like it is.”
Online, LGBT people are experiencing another “coming out” in sharing their support for Trump -- the hashtags #GaysForTrump and #ComeOut4Trump are accompanied by selfies and declarations of jumping on the Trump Train.
“Every single Donald Trump supporter, and they come from all political backgrounds, have been loving, supportive and encouraging. They said they will defend me, they will support me and they will stand with me against oppression and terror,” said Zieman of his experience switching his support.
Ross knows many if not most in the LGBT community will vote Democrat, but said Trump’s message is getting through.
“You are starting to see more and more gay people become comfortable with the idea that Trump might be a candidate that they need to pursue,” Ross said.


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[h=6]- JUNE 17, 2016 -[/h][h=1]WHY LGBT COMMUNITY SHOULD BACK TRUMP[/h]CNN
On Sunday, everything changed for LGBT people in America. The terrorist attack on a gay nightclub in Orlando, which left 49 dead, was not simply a hate crime. This was not two gay guys getting roughed up by young hooligans incensed at seeing two men holding hands. This was an act of war.
This act of war was perpetrated by an adherent to radical Islam -- an ideology that seeks the extermination of LGBT people worldwide. For LGBT people in this country, the stakes could not be any higher -- or any more personal.
For LGBT Americans, this election won't be about bathrooms or who will bake our wedding cakes. No, this election will be about which of the candidates for President is willing to stand up and fight to defend our very right to life itself.
In the wake of Sunday's attack, we heard from both Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. Only one of those two candidates spoke forcefully and passionately about defending LGBT Americans. Only one of those candidates seemed 100% committed to protecting us from terrorists who seek to murder us simply because of who we are -- and that candidate was Donald Trump.
Before Trump, Republican nominees shied from using the phrase LGBT on the campaign trail. In contrast, Donald Trump more than said the word, he promised action:
"Our nation stands together in solidarity with the members of Orlando's LGBT community. They have been through something that nobody could ever experience. This is a very dark moment in America's history. A radical Islamic terrorist targeted the nightclub, not only because he wanted to kill Americans, but in order to execute gay and lesbian citizens, because of their sexual orientation.
"It's a strike at the heart and soul of who we are as a nation. It's an assault on the ability of free people to live their lives, love who they want, and express their identity. It's an attack on the right of every single American to live in peace and safety in their own country."
Clinton seems to fancy herself as the Cher of politics for LGBT Americans -- an ally, an advocate and an icon. The truth is that she only became an ally of LGBT Americans once it became politically advantageous for her to be one. It's hard not to conclude that her evolution from Defense of Marriage Act supporter to marriage equality advocate had more to do with her ambitions than any deep-seated beliefs.
Unlike Clinton, Trump has a record in the business world of inclusion and support for LGBT Americans. Donald Trump was supporting average LGBT Americans who worked for his companies and patronized his hotels and clubs long before it became trendy to do so.
Even now, what kind of ally is Hillary Clinton to the LGBT community? She is quick to sell rainbow-flag-emblazoned campaign paraphernalia, and happy to soak up campaign contributions from our community, but when it comes to protecting LGBT Americans from an ideology that seeks to massacre us -- she equivocates.
Trump called Clinton to task for her hypocrisy on Monday:
"She can't have it both ways. She can't claim to be supportive of these communities while trying to increase the number of people coming in who want to oppress these same communities. How does this kind of immigration make our lives better? How does this kind of immigration make our country better? Why does Hillary Clinton want to bring people in in vast numbers who reject our values? Why? Explain.
"Ask yourself who is really the friend of women and the LGBT community, Donald Trump with actions or Hillary Clinton with her words?"
Most countries in the Middle East prescribe criminal penalties for being gay. In Iran and Saudi Arabia, the penalty is death. ISIS is throwing gay men off of buildings simply for being born gay. Yet, in the face of this, Hillary Clinton told the world last November that we had nothing to fear:
"Let's be clear: Islam is not our adversary. Muslims are peaceful and tolerant people and have nothing whatsoever to do with terrorism."
LGBT Americans learned the hard way just how desperately wrong Clinton was about the threat facing our country and our community in particular. Her reluctance to say what needs to be said about the very real threat posed by radical Islam -- and to stand up against the rampant brutalization of LGBT people across the Muslim world -- is nothing short of pure treachery. She has been sacrificing LGBT safety on the altar of political correctness.
It is an act that many in the LGBT community will not soon forget.




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Hey, Scumbag, how many were at Frump's rally? 100,000? What, aren't you gonna post results from a poll taken more than a month ago again? No comment over that punk who manhandles women getting fired? Doesn't exactly sound like things are going well, does it? He's broke, relatively speaking, and Hillary is outspending him 24 mill to NOTHING in 8 battleground states-plus, there are rumblings that the backstabbing GOP is gonna try a coup at the Convention, lol. Yeah, things are goin' ACES for Herr Frump... :pointer:cheersgif:thumbsup2::nohead:
My original bet still open anytime...
 

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“Emergency”: Trump Begs for Money to Make America Great Again!

June 19, 2016



You remember Donald Trump,…he’s the candidate that is REALLY wealthy.
He said: “I don’t need anybody else’s money.”
“I’m using my own money.”
“I’m not using lobbyists, donors, I don’t care.”
“I’m really rich.”
” …And by the way, I’m not even saying that in a braggadocios way. That’s the kind of mind-set, that’s the kind of thinking you need for this country.”
Trump’s philosophy is that you have to be wealthy to be great!

Over and over, Trump has bragged about his wealth and financial acumen.
Trump has spoken about his wealth more than any single policy he advocates as part of his platform.
A big part of his appeal with low education voters is that they perceive Trump as a man of great financial success who would make America great again by leading us to become a wealthy country. His statement that he is funding his campaign with his money is equally important to these supporters, because they wanted their candidate to be elected, without the need to contribute any of their own money.

However the deception of Donald Trump is becoming more apparent as his popularity plummets.
Trump has made it apparent that he no longer believes an investment in himself is a good deal. “I mean, do I want to sell a couple of buildings and self-fund? I don’t know that I want to do that necessarily, but I really won’t be asking for money for myself, I’ll be asking money for the party.”In October, Trump demanded that super PACs backing him close up shop—though only after the Post spotlighted the close ties between the Trump campaign and one of the super PACs. In April, Trump’s campaign sent a cajoling letter to Great America PAC, a new super PAC backing him, complaining that the group could confuse backers and muddy his message.
Trump even put his message in writing by Tweeting:
557493_10151443611110725_645976657_n.jpg

Donald J. Trump
“By self-funding my campaign, I am not controlled by my donors, special interests or lobbyists. I am only working for the people of the U.S.!”





The truth is that Trump never really self funded his campaign. Trump has raised roughly $48 million so far, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. More than $12 million of that came from donations to the campaign. Until last fall, they were the major fuel for Trump’s run. Politifact’s Lauren Carroll notes, “From the start of his campaign in April through October last year, individual contributions made up about 67 percent of total money raised for his campaign.”
“A good chunk of the money that Trump’s campaign is spending is actually going right back to companies controlled by Donald Trump, as payment for services rendered. The New York Times reported in February:
About $2.7 million … was paid to at least seven companies Mr. Trump owns or to people who work for his real estate and branding empire, repaying them for services provided to his campaign. That total included more than $2 million for flights on his own planes and helicopter, a quarter of a million dollars to his Fifth Avenue office tower, and even $66,000 to Keith Schiller, his bodyguard and the head of security at the Trump Organization. Trump is in effect taking millions of dollars out of one pocket and depositing it into another.

The money Trump has “spent” on his campaign has been not in the form of donations to his campaign, but in the form of loans. Trump has demonstrated through 4 bankruptcies that he is a master at amassing debt that will never be paid, but ensuring that his companies get paid first, before declaring bankruptcy.In 2000, Trump told Fortune, “It’s very possible that I could be the first presidential candidate to run and make money on it.” Raking in donations and then paying himself back,with interest, would be a way for him to profit,but for others to lose everything.




Wouldn’t it be ironic if Trump’s true vision of how to make America Great Again, was for him to become wealthier.
 

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“Emergency”: Trump Begs for Money to Make America Great Again!

June 19, 2016



You remember Donald Trump,…he’s the candidate that is REALLY wealthy.
He said: “I don’t need anybody else’s money.”
“I’m using my own money.”
“I’m not using lobbyists, donors, I don’t care.”
“I’m really rich.”
” …And by the way, I’m not even saying that in a braggadocios way. That’s the kind of mind-set, that’s the kind of thinking you need for this country.”
Trump’s philosophy is that you have to be wealthy to be great!

Over and over, Trump has bragged about his wealth and financial acumen.
Trump has spoken about his wealth more than any single policy he advocates as part of his platform.
A big part of his appeal with low education voters is that they perceive Trump as a man of great financial success who would make America great again by leading us to become a wealthy country. His statement that he is funding his campaign with his money is equally important to these supporters, because they wanted their candidate to be elected, without the need to contribute any of their own money.

However the deception of Donald Trump is becoming more apparent as his popularity plummets.
Trump has made it apparent that he no longer believes an investment in himself is a good deal. “I mean, do I want to sell a couple of buildings and self-fund? I don’t know that I want to do that necessarily, but I really won’t be asking for money for myself, I’ll be asking money for the party.”In October, Trump demanded that super PACs backing him close up shop—though only after the Post spotlighted the close ties between the Trump campaign and one of the super PACs. In April, Trump’s campaign sent a cajoling letter to Great America PAC, a new super PAC backing him, complaining that the group could confuse backers and muddy his message.
Trump even put his message in writing by Tweeting:
557493_10151443611110725_645976657_n.jpg

Donald J. Trump
“By self-funding my campaign, I am not controlled by my donors, special interests or lobbyists. I am only working for the people of the U.S.!”





The truth is that Trump never really self funded his campaign. Trump has raised roughly $48 million so far, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. More than $12 million of that came from donations to the campaign. Until last fall, they were the major fuel for Trump’s run. Politifact’s Lauren Carroll notes, “From the start of his campaign in April through October last year, individual contributions made up about 67 percent of total money raised for his campaign.”
“A good chunk of the money that Trump’s campaign is spending is actually going right back to companies controlled by Donald Trump, as payment for services rendered. The New York Times reported in February:
About $2.7 million … was paid to at least seven companies Mr. Trump owns or to people who work for his real estate and branding empire, repaying them for services provided to his campaign. That total included more than $2 million for flights on his own planes and helicopter, a quarter of a million dollars to his Fifth Avenue office tower, and even $66,000 to Keith Schiller, his bodyguard and the head of security at the Trump Organization. Trump is in effect taking millions of dollars out of one pocket and depositing it into another.

The money Trump has “spent” on his campaign has been not in the form of donations to his campaign, but in the form of loans. Trump has demonstrated through 4 bankruptcies that he is a master at amassing debt that will never be paid, but ensuring that his companies get paid first, before declaring bankruptcy.In 2000, Trump told Fortune, “It’s very possible that I could be the first presidential candidate to run and make money on it.” Raking in donations and then paying himself back,with interest, would be a way for him to profit,but for others to lose everything.




Wouldn’t it be ironic if Trump’s true vision of how to make America Great Again, was for him to become wealthier.
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Donald Trump’s Latest Campaign Finance Report Makes Dumpster Fires Look Good

Trump’s campaign only has $1.3 million cash on hand. Sad!


06/20/2016 11:15 pm ET

Paul Blumenthal Money in Politics Reporter, The Huffington Post


5768a5871500002f001ba75d.jpeg
BOSTON GLOBE VIA GETTY IMAGES
Donald Trump trails Hillary Clinton in campaign funds by an unprecedented amount.

WASHINGTON — Presumptive Republican Party presidential nominee Donald Trump entered June with just $1.3 million cash on hand in his campaign account, according to a campaign finance report filed on Monday. The tiny sum is the result of Trump’s poor first month of fundraising from donors that netted just $3.1 million.
The total is unbelievably paltry for a major party nominee, and places him further behind his opponent in terms of funds and campaign infrastructure than any other modern presidential candidate. In 2012, the collected efforts of the candidates, parties and super PACs of both Barack Obama and Mitt Romney spent more than $1 billion each.
Clinton, by comparison, raised $26.4 million for her campaign in the same time period as Trump’s $3.1 million. In May 2012, when Romney was the presumptive Republican nominee, he raised $23.4 million.
When party committees and supportive super PACs are factored in, the disparity between Clinton and Trump becomes astronomical.
Aside from the $26.4 million raised for Clinton’s campaign, Priorities USA Action (the super PAC endorsed by her campaign) pulled in an additional $12.4 million. The Democratic National Committee also raised $12.3 million. In total, these three committees comprising Team Clinton entered June with $103.4 million cash on hand.
Team Trump — his campaign, the Republican National Committee and the super PAC Great America — had a combined $21.7 million cash on hand. That is five times less than what Team Clinton has available to spend.
Team Clinton and Team Trump Cash on Hand (May 31, 2016)
5768a63515000030001ba760.png
HUFFPOST
Source: Federal Election Commission.The astonishing gap in funding has produced massive disparities in both television advertising and staff on the ground.
Priorities USA Action just launched a $20 million ad buy across swing states and has already spent $10.5 million attacking Trump and another $5 million boosting Clinton on air. The Clinton campaign just reserved television air time across eight states.
The Clinton campaign boasts a massive staff of 685 people, while the Trump campaign’s payroll sits at 69. Both numbers are down from April, but the presumptive Democratic nominee also has already begun to farm out her campaign staff to the DNC and state parties to begin to organize in key swing states and beyond. She has further promised to place staff in all 50 states to help get out the vote for her campaign and down-ballot Democrats.
Trump effectively became the party nominee on May 4 after defeating Texas Sen. Ted Cruz in the Indiana primary. He quickly stated that he would cease self-funding his campaign and start raising money for both his own committee and the Republican Party.
“I’m not looking for myself, I’m looking out for the party, so the party can compete in Senate races and House races. I want to raise money for the party,” he said on Fox at the time.
And he did raise $3 million through a joint fundraising committee called Trump Victory, formed in the waning weeks of May, for the Republican National Committee. That is about a quarter of the $13 million the RNC raised last month. The problem, though, is that Trump’s fundraising totals are both little and late, especially compared to both Clinton’s current total and the 2012 total of Romney, who became his party’s leader nine days earlier in the election year than Trump did.
The majority of Trump’s available cash is housed at the RNC, but the central party committee may have expected much more. In 2012, with the help Romney’s formidable network of wealthy donors, the RNC raised $34 million in May — $21 million more than this year. Romney, meanwhile, raised $23.4 million in May 2012, his best fundraising month of the cycle and $20 million more than Trump.
Overall, the RNC has raised $163 million through May, or $6 million less than in 2012 at the same point. But the RNC’s fundraising strength is centered on the large contributions it has received in special accounts that cannot be used to pay for election expenses. The committee has pulled in $33.4 million for its convention, building and recount accounts from donors who can give up to $100,200 to each one. That leaves just $129 million in their main campaign account to help Republican get elected this fall — far less than they had in 2012 at this juncture.
The DNC trails the RNC, with $108 million raised overall and $100 million raised when not including the convention, building and recount accounts.
This will not help make up the astronomical gap between Clinton’s $42 million cash on hand and Trump’s $1.2 million cash on hand. Candidates pay the lowest unit price for advertising, while parties and outside groups pay the expensive going rate. This means that candidate money goes much, much further — as Romney, who leaned too hard on super PACs in 2012, learned the hard way.
Trump has increased his fundraising schedule, and has already made stops in Texas, New York, Arizona, Georgia and Virginia in June. It is increasingly likely, however, that political scientists will finally get to see a real-world test of whether having a fully funded and fully functioning campaign really matters for its results.

Editor’s note: Donald Trump regularly incites political violence and is a serial liar, rampant xenophobe, racist, misogynist and birther who has repeatedly pledged to ban all Muslims — 1.6 billion members of an entire religion — from entering the U.S.


 

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Donald Trump’s Latest Campaign Finance Report Makes Dumpster Fires Look Good

Trump’s campaign only has $1.3 million cash on hand. Sad!


06/20/2016 11:15 pm ET

Paul Blumenthal Money in Politics Reporter, The Huffington Post


5768a5871500002f001ba75d.jpeg
BOSTON GLOBE VIA GETTY IMAGES
Donald Trump trails Hillary Clinton in campaign funds by an unprecedented amount.

WASHINGTON — Presumptive Republican Party presidential nominee Donald Trump entered June with just $1.3 million cash on hand in his campaign account, according to a campaign finance report filed on Monday. The tiny sum is the result of Trump’s poor first month of fundraising from donors that netted just $3.1 million.
The total is unbelievably paltry for a major party nominee, and places him further behind his opponent in terms of funds and campaign infrastructure than any other modern presidential candidate. In 2012, the collected efforts of the candidates, parties and super PACs of both Barack Obama and Mitt Romney spent more than $1 billion each.
Clinton, by comparison, raised $26.4 million for her campaign in the same time period as Trump’s $3.1 million. In May 2012, when Romney was the presumptive Republican nominee, he raised $23.4 million.
When party committees and supportive super PACs are factored in, the disparity between Clinton and Trump becomes astronomical.
Aside from the $26.4 million raised for Clinton’s campaign, Priorities USA Action (the super PAC endorsed by her campaign) pulled in an additional $12.4 million. The Democratic National Committee also raised $12.3 million. In total, these three committees comprising Team Clinton entered June with $103.4 million cash on hand.
Team Trump — his campaign, the Republican National Committee and the super PAC Great America — had a combined $21.7 million cash on hand. That is five times less than what Team Clinton has available to spend.
Team Clinton and Team Trump Cash on Hand (May 31, 2016)
5768a63515000030001ba760.png
HUFFPOST
Source: Federal Election Commission.The astonishing gap in funding has produced massive disparities in both television advertising and staff on the ground.
Priorities USA Action just launched a $20 million ad buy across swing states and has already spent $10.5 million attacking Trump and another $5 million boosting Clinton on air. The Clinton campaign just reserved television air time across eight states.
The Clinton campaign boasts a massive staff of 685 people, while the Trump campaign’s payroll sits at 69. Both numbers are down from April, but the presumptive Democratic nominee also has already begun to farm out her campaign staff to the DNC and state parties to begin to organize in key swing states and beyond. She has further promised to place staff in all 50 states to help get out the vote for her campaign and down-ballot Democrats.
Trump effectively became the party nominee on May 4 after defeating Texas Sen. Ted Cruz in the Indiana primary. He quickly stated that he would cease self-funding his campaign and start raising money for both his own committee and the Republican Party.
“I’m not looking for myself, I’m looking out for the party, so the party can compete in Senate races and House races. I want to raise money for the party,” he said on Fox at the time.
And he did raise $3 million through a joint fundraising committee called Trump Victory, formed in the waning weeks of May, for the Republican National Committee. That is about a quarter of the $13 million the RNC raised last month. The problem, though, is that Trump’s fundraising totals are both little and late, especially compared to both Clinton’s current total and the 2012 total of Romney, who became his party’s leader nine days earlier in the election year than Trump did.
The majority of Trump’s available cash is housed at the RNC, but the central party committee may have expected much more. In 2012, with the help Romney’s formidable network of wealthy donors, the RNC raised $34 million in May — $21 million more than this year. Romney, meanwhile, raised $23.4 million in May 2012, his best fundraising month of the cycle and $20 million more than Trump.
Overall, the RNC has raised $163 million through May, or $6 million less than in 2012 at the same point. But the RNC’s fundraising strength is centered on the large contributions it has received in special accounts that cannot be used to pay for election expenses. The committee has pulled in $33.4 million for its convention, building and recount accounts from donors who can give up to $100,200 to each one. That leaves just $129 million in their main campaign account to help Republican get elected this fall — far less than they had in 2012 at this juncture.
The DNC trails the RNC, with $108 million raised overall and $100 million raised when not including the convention, building and recount accounts.
This will not help make up the astronomical gap between Clinton’s $42 million cash on hand and Trump’s $1.2 million cash on hand. Candidates pay the lowest unit price for advertising, while parties and outside groups pay the expensive going rate. This means that candidate money goes much, much further — as Romney, who leaned too hard on super PACs in 2012, learned the hard way.
Trump has increased his fundraising schedule, and has already made stops in Texas, New York, Arizona, Georgia and Virginia in June. It is increasingly likely, however, that political scientists will finally get to see a real-world test of whether having a fully funded and fully functioning campaign really matters for its results.

Editor’s note: Donald Trump regularly incites political violence and is a serial liar, rampant xenophobe, racist, misogynist and birther who has repeatedly pledged to ban all Muslims — 1.6 billion members of an entire religion — from entering the U.S.




Trump doubles monthly campaign fundraising

By REUTERS
PUBLISHED: 04:05, 21 June 2016 | UPDATED: 04:05, 21 June 2016
By Grant Smith, Michelle Conlin and Ginger Gibson



NEW YORK/WASHINGTON, June 20 (Reuters) - Republican presidential hopeful Donald Trump's campaign raised $3.1 million from donors in May, more than doubling previous monthly hauls as he began soliciting donations to battle Democratic rival Hillary Clinton.

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