[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
Status: Not Logged In; Sign In
United States News Title: Contrast Hillary with Trump for a moment Becoming the nominee of the party of Abraham Lincoln, a lot of people dont realize that, Abraham Lincoln, the great Abraham Lincoln was a Republican, has been the greatest honor of my life, Trump said. It is on his legacy that I hope to build the future of the party but more importantly the future of the country. Moments after Trump spoke, Hillary Clintons campaign, which has sought to tie Trump to racist elements of the alt-right and some of his white-nationalist supporters, distributed statements from black leaders saying Trumps outreach was too little, too late. Church-goers in Detroit were open to listening to Trump, though most remained cool to the notion of actually voting for him. Joseph McFadden, a Democrat who said he would vote Democratic this fall, said, Were here to listen. Charnell Williams, 21, will be voting in her first presidential campaign and arrived with an open mind. I think it could be a good thing. Maybe he will have something good to say? she said. In his speech, Trump called for a civil rights agenda and included school choice and economic opportunity at its center. One that ensures the rights to a great education, so important, and the right to live in safety and in peace and to have a really, really great job, a good paying job and one that you love to go to every morning and that can happen. Nothing is more sad, Trump added later, than when we sideline young black men with unfulfilled potential. Trumps subdued rhetoric was a jarring contrast to his typically boisterous rallies. He closed with a reading from the Bible and seemed a bit surprised that everyone cheered when he named the passage he would read. Most groups I speak to, dont know that, he said. But we know it. Black leaders in Michigan were skeptical of both Trumps intentions and the political impact of his visit. Just because hes friends with Mike Tyson and has Omarosa doing outreach doesnt make him appealing to black people, said Keith Owens, a senior editor at the Michigan Chronicle, the oldest black newspaper in Michigan. Owens said Trump was right in diagnosing many of the ailments in black America too much violence, too much a lot of things, Owens said, including poverty and illiteracy but that Trump was short on solutions. He operates on fear and negativity, Owens said. All he has talked about is what is wrong. Trump's first visit to a black church, which required tickets for entry and was heavily hyped, but did not draw a full crowd, There were rows and rows of empty seats in the back half of the church, even as the Trump campaign did not provide an opportunity for some local reporters to attend. In the conclusion of his speech, Trump said, It is my prayer that America of tomorrow, and I mean that, the America of tomorrow will be one of unity, togetherness and peace. And perhaps we can add the word prosperity. After his speech, Jackson, who had interviewed Trump for a broadcast to be televised later in the week before the service, draped Trump in a prayer shawl he gave Trump as a gift. Trump left with his security detail after receiving the gift and before the service was over. As first lady, she would sometimes arrange travel for herself and Chelsea separate from her husband, partly to avoid the protective pool of reporters assigned to the president. In 2008, she fought tooth and nail, former aides said, to avoid sharing the plane with her press corps and relented only when her campaign was running out of money and had to either bring the reporters on board or downgrade to commercial. And in 2016, with plenty of cash and a winning position in the race, Clinton has managed to keep the press at arms length preserving her private plane as a refuge where the only people around are her trusted campaign aides. That changes on Labor Day, when the reporters and their press-leery candidate will for the first time board a Stronger Together-wrapped 737 from New York to Ohio to Iowa, and remain flying companions for the final stretch of the campaign. Her team insists Clinton is on board with the set-up, despite her distrust of the national media. "She does understand that there is very good reason why it's important for everyone to be together in the thick of a general election, said her traveling spokesman Nick Merrill. We're going wrap the plane in blue and get on it together. There's a desire to be efficient and be able to do things a little more impromptu. But closer quarters are no guarantee of a new level of access. The times she'll go back and schmooze will be few and far between, predicted one longtime Clinton ally. She'll send other people back there, instead. Indeed, trailing Clinton since she has become the Democratic nominee has been less about developing a relationship with the candidate and more like a sensory deprivation experience. When shes speaking at a fundraiser, reporters camped outside can sometimes hear a muffled voice but can rarely make out her actual words. When shes greeting voters at a coffee shop or on a rope line after a rally, the former secretary of state often looks right through the reporters hovering around her, like they dont exist. And when she does acknowledge their physical presence, she smiles through the questions barked at her and encourages reporters to sample a coffee, or a chocolate, instead. There are full days when the rotating pool of traveling press does not even set eyes on Clinton (in one instance earlier this month, Clinton slipped out to Marthas Vineyard from New York, ditching the pool of reporters assigned to cover her altogether). Certainly, the past month has been somewhat out of the ordinary for the campaign -- Clinton has been on a cash dash, spending the bulk of the end of summer at private, closed-press fundraisers rather than public events. (Twice, she popped up to call into cable television programs.) But there has hardly been a halcyon period of accessibility since she launched her campaign 18 months ago. As she enters the final stage of the race sparking new hopes of accessibility on board Hill Force One, here is a sampling from life on the road with Clinton, culled from the print pool reports for the last 20 days: Drowned Out By a Jet Engine, Aug. 31: Clintons plane landed in Cincinnati, from East Hampton, ahead of her speech to the American Legion. On the tarmac, Clinton was greeted by a group of county Democratic party chairs. But, your pooler was not close enough to hear any conversations over the noise of the plane. They Paved Paradise and Put up a Parking Lot, Aug. 30: Clinton hit up three big fundraisers in the Hamptons. While she raked in the cash, the pool didnt have much to report on. Pool was unable to hear a word of HRC's remarks at first cocktail party. She also took questions, which pool was also prohibited from hearing. At an evening fundraiser hosted by Jimmy Buffett, Clinton was inside dancing with Paul McCartney, according to attendees. Pool reporters were stationed about 400 yards away from the house, among the parked cars. Basement Blues, Aug. 29: While Clinton entertained donors who coughed up $33,400 a head to attend a Hamptons fundraiser at the home of Jay Snyder, there was no chance of your pool hearing Clinton here. We are being held in a quaint, but lovely guest house, while Clinton is in the main house. Earlier in the day, there was a brief window at a fundraiser when the pool could hear Clintons remarks. That was quickly remedied. Staff shooed us into a hidden room farther in the basement out of earshot. Exclusive Interview with a Caretaker, Aug. 28: Clinton attended four fundraisers in the Hamptons. In Bridgehampton, pool had a funny exchange with the man who described himself as the caretaker of the house where we waited. He asked when we were leaving to go into the fundraiser and see her. We told him no, we arent allowed to do that. He seemed incredulous. Pool reported no sighting of Clinton the entire day. Intel Briefing, Aug. 27: Clinton attended her intelligence briefing in White Plains, while the pool loitered in a parking lot outside. Pool was driven out to Sag Harbor while Clinton returned to her Chappaqua home, post briefing, and did not know her whereabouts for the rest of the day. Chocolates > Questions, Aug. 25: Clinton popped into Hub Coffee Roasters after a rally in Reno. There, she ignored questions about Donald Trump lobbed at her from the reporters in the coffee shop. Instead, she encouraged them to sample Dorindas Chocolates. Its really good! she said. Muffled Mumblings, Aug. 24: Hillary Clinton attended a full day of fundraisers in California, but at the end of a long day that ended at 10 p.m., pool lost sight of the motorcade as it pulled into the hotel garage, marking a full day without a glimpse of Clinton. While Clinton raised money at the estate of Laurene Powell Jobs, the widow of Steve Jobs, the pool didnt even catch a glimpse of the house, instead we have to hold at a nearby restaurant. At a fundraiser earlier in the day, "pool could hear Clinton's voice, but could not make out any exact words. The Wave, Aug. 23: In Burbank, California, as Clinton entered Justin Timberlakes mansion for a fundraiser, pool reported that Clinton waved to us. Also, a Jennifer Aniston sighting. Magic Johnsons Driveway, Aug. 22: After a fundraiser at Magic Johnsons house, pool was able to see Magic wave goodbye to HRC from the driveway. We Can Hear Her! Aug. 21: Clinton attended a fundraiser headlined by Cher in Provincetown. The pooler was able to catch snippets of Clintons remarks, which touched on issues like infrastructure, health care, mental health and the fact that she plans to include LGBT people in her administration. Friends dont let friends vote for Trump, Clinton told the audience. Marthas Vineyard, Aug. 20: At a fundraiser on the island, attended by both Clintons, pool didnt have as much luck as in Provincetown. At one point we could hear HRCs voice followed by large cheers, but nothing more. Stranded in New York, Aug. 19: Straight from the pool report: Clinton went out to Marthas Vineyard a day early, without the pool. Although we had a pooler on standby in New York, the campaign told us about this development only after the fact. Ignoring Questions, Aug. 17: Clinton ignored questions shouted at her about Trumps campaign shakeup, while she took a tour of John Marshall High School in Cleveland, ahead of a rally there, one of her two public events of the past two weeks. Police Reporting, Aug. 11: Sitting at a Starbucks across from Clintons Chicago fundraiser, pool noted that opposite us on Wabash Avenue a blue minivan is on fire. Pool called 911. When Clinton departed about 90 minutes later, pool had abandoned its position at the Starbucks on Wabash -- opposite the charred husk of the minivan -- to get a glimpse of her on the way out. No such luck. Something is very strange. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 7.
#7. To: buckeroo, gatlin, *Bill of Rights-Constitution* (#0)
Aspires to be like Abe Lincoln, the worst president in history.
There are no replies to Comment # 7. End Trace Mode for Comment # 7.
Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest |
[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
|