How can you tell when a campaign is perhaps getting over-confident? When headlines like this start to appear:
Clinton’s advisers tell her to prep for a landslide
Advisers to Hillary Clinton’s campaign have identified so many paths to an Election Day victory they are now focusing not only on the one or two battlegrounds that would ensure a win but on opening up the possibility of an Electoral College landslide.
“Hillary Clinton has many paths to 270 electoral votes, more than any candidate ... Read More >>
Advisers to Hillary Clinton’s campaign have identified so many paths to an Election Day victory they are now focusing not only on the one or two battlegrounds that would ensure a win but on opening up the possibility of an Electoral College landslide.
“Hillary Clinton has many paths to 270 electoral votes, more than any candidate in a generation,” said Jeff Berman, a paid consultant to her campaign.
Read More >>Don’t look now, but Donald Trump is on the rebound in Wisconsin.
Two new polls released Wednesday showed the GOP nominee closing the once massive gap against Hillary Clinton in deep blue Wisconsin.
Read More >>Donald Trump has hired David Bossie, the president of Citizens United, as his new campaign deputy manager, a move that signals the Republican candidate is likely preparing to go hard after Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton.
Trump announced the hire during a phone call with the Washington Post.
Read More >>A prominent Latino surrogate for Donald Trump announced Thursday he had officially withdrawn his support from the Republican presidential nominee after the real estate mogul resumed his hard-line immigration position in a major policy speech in Arizona.
The fight for Ohio in the 2016 election is a showcase for how Republicans and Democrats are navigating a deeply divided electorate.
The presidential campaigns of Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton descended on Thursday, giving a glimpse of their approaches in one of just a handful of states that will be decisive in the presidential race and which party controls the Senate.
Read More >>Donald J. Trump’s campaign was teetering early last month, with an increasingly isolated candidate and a downcast staff that seemed to lurch from crisis to crisis. Having fired his campaign chairman and retooled his message, Mr. Trump was still far behind Hillary Clinton in the polls, and Republicans were running away from him.
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