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Added on the 24/10/2016 19:34:16 - Copyright : Wochit
US Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump called the New York Times newspaper a "garbage paper" at his rally at the Sacred Heart University in Fairfield, Connecticut on Saturday.
President Donald Trump has waged an all-out war against the election results. Several Republicans have waged lawsuits in multiple states seeking to overturn the election results. Sen. Mitt Romney said it would "madness" for Republicans to protest the vote certifying the election for Joe Biden. "We have a process, recounts are appropriate, going to the court is approp & pursuing every legal avenue is appropriate." "Trying to get electors not to do what the people voted to do is madness."
When it comes to his Cabinet, President Donald Trump has certainly lived up to his 'Celebrity Apprentice' catchphrase, 'You're fired.' Whether they left because they resigned or were fired, the list of former Trump officials who say they'll be voting for Democratic opponent Joe Biden is growing. According to Business Insider, some have joined anti-Trump political coalitions such as The Lincoln Project, Republican Voters Against Trump, and others. Hoping to sway the votes of independent, undecided, and moderate Republicans, they've spent millions on campaign ads to oust Trump from the White House. Former DHS chief of staff Miles Taylor called working under Trump 'terrifying," saying many things Trump wanted the department to do were illegal. Former White House communications director, Anthony Scaramucci, says he'll be voting for Biden. And former national security adviser John Bolton won't be voting for Trump or Biden. Instead, he'll write in the name of a conservative candidate.
Thousands of people gathered at the Xfinity Arena, in Everett, Washington, on Tuesday night, where Republican Presidential nominee Donald Trump held a campaign rally. During his speech, Trump went on to criticise Democratic Presidential nominee Hillary Clinton, stating that her policies are bringing in "illegal immigrants" and taking "jobs from our hard-working African American and Hispanic citizens, and they want those jobs."
Democratic presidential nominee Hilary Clinton told her Republican rival, Donald Trump, to "dream on,"over insinuations he has made over her failing health, during a rally in Reno, Nevada on Thursday.
Former leader of the UK Independence Party (UKIP) Nigel Farage joined Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump during a campaign rally in Jackson, Mississippi, Wednesday. Commenting on Brexit, Farage stated "We made June the 23rd our independence day, when we smashed the establishment." He went on to slam Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton saying "I wouldn't vote for Hillary Clinton if you'd pay me. In fact I wouldn't vote for Hillary Clinton if she'd pay me."