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Image Credit... Doug Mills/The New York TimesFormer President Donald J. Trump will make two appearances today, first addressing the evangelical Faith and Freedom Coalition in Washington, D.C., before holding a campaign rally in Philadelphia. President Biden is at Camp David, the presidential country retreat, for the weekend. The presidential campaign is entering a crucial phase. Mr. Biden and Mr. Trump will face off in an unusually early debate on CNN on Thursday as polls reflect a tightening race. FiveThirtyEight’s aggregate of national polls show Mr. Biden very slightly ahead of Mr. Trump for the first time since recording began in March, while its election forecast shows the outcome of the race as effectively a coin flip.
Persons: Doug Mills, Donald J, Trump, Biden, David Organizations: New York Times, Freedom Coalition, Washington , D.C, CNN Locations: Washington ,, Philadelphia
Read previewPresident Joe Biden's approval rating remains severely underwater just under five months before Americans will render their verdict on his reelection bid. Joe Biden's approval rating has hit 37.4% in 538's average—an all-time low. https://t.co/sF8buXFup9 pic.twitter.com/lZcLTxOOw2 — Nathaniel Rakich (@baseballot) June 10, 2024On Monday, Biden notched the unpleasant distinction of recording his lowest-ever mark in FiveThirtyEight's weighted tracker of his approval rating with a 37.4% approval. According to FiveThirtyEight's weighted average, Trump has a 41.6% approval rating. Four other modern presidents had an average sub-50% approval rating at this same point in time.
Persons: , Joe Biden's, sF8buXFup9, lZcLTxOOw2, Nathaniel Rakich, Biden, Donald Trump's, Trump, Gallup, Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama Organizations: Service, Business, Monday, White House, Capitol, Gallup, Biden Locations: Gaza, Afghanistan
CNN —Former President Donald Trump on Tuesday said he did not support restricting birth control after saying earlier in the day he was “looking at” contraceptives when asked if he supported any restrictions to the right to contraception. “I HAVE NEVER, AND WILL NEVER ADVOCATE IMPOSING RESTRICTIONS ON BIRTH CONTROL, or other contraceptives,” Trump posted on Truth Social. He wants to rip away our freedom to access birth control too,” Biden campaign spokesperson Sarafina Chitika said in a statement. Legal access to birth control is popular among most Americans. A FiveThirtyEight/Ipsos poll conducted in 2022 found 89% of Americans support mostly or completely legal access to birth control pills and 71% support access to emergency contraception like Plan B.
Persons: Donald Trump, ” Trump, Biden, Trump, , Trump “, Donald Trump’s, ” Biden, Sarafina Chitika, Harris, Roe, Wade, Republicans “ Organizations: CNN, Pittsburgh TV, KDKA, Biden, Trump, Republicans, , GOP
Trump repeatedly attacked Kennedy over social media this past weekend, despite the former president's claim that he knows little about Kennedy. Trump's refusal to debate Kennedy may not be entirely in his hands. But Trump and his allies have been harshly critical of the debate commission. AdvertisementBiden recently told radio host Howard Stern that he would like to debate Trump, but there is rampant speculation such a debate will never occur. The second debate was canceled after Trump refused to accept a virtual format after the then-president tested positive for COVID-19.
Persons: , Donald Trump, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Trump, Kennedy, Biden, He's, Nicole Shanahan, MAGA, Joe Biden, Ross Perot, Howard Stern Organizations: Service, RFK, Business, NBC News, Trump voters, Capitol, Politico, Republican National, Texas State University, Trump Locations: Manhattan, Texas, San Marcos , Texas
In February, there was a flurry of discussion about whether Joe Biden’s advancing age and seeming weakness in a matchup with Donald Trump meant that he should step aside. “The Drumbeat for Biden to Step Aside Will Only Grow Louder” ran one headline from that period, from Robert Kuttner in the American Prospect. All it took was Biden giving a passable State of the Union address: Thereafter his poll numbers marginally improved, the optimists on the Democratic side seized the rhetorical initiative, and the “should Biden step aside?” discourse faded into background noise. But it’s also quite consistent; since last fall, both candidates are bouncing around within a very narrow range. ), because voters aren’t paying close attention yet (but don’t they already know both of the candidates quite well?
Persons: Joe Biden’s, Donald Trump, Biden, Nate Silver, Ezra Klein, Robert Hur, Robert Kuttner, Kuttner, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, it’s, he’s Organizations: Democratic, Trump, Electoral College Locations: Georgia, Michigan, Arizona , Nevada , Pennsylvania, Wisconsin
President Joe Biden is mad about his low polling numbers despite his economic successes. Biden also resisted when aides tried to keep him from public events where he could misspeak or trip. The low numbers stemmed from voters' discontent with Biden's response to the war in Gaza, the lawmaker said. "The man's been successful for decades in Congress and became vice president and president," one source who used to work for the administration told NBC. Another source speaking anonymously told NBC that Biden may be "a little mad at himself for not being more forceful with the staff."
Persons: Joe Biden, Biden, , hasn't, he's, speechwriters Organizations: NBC News, Service, White, NBC, Business Locations: Michigan, Georgia, Gaza
Was Trump’s Nomination Always Inevitable?
  + stars: | 2024-03-06 | by ( Charles Homans | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Nikki Haley’s exit from the presidential race this morning all but assures former President Donald Trump of the Republican nomination, in a contest that has been notably lacking in suspense. But that wasn’t always the case. As recently as a year ago, less than half of Republican voters in FiveThirtyEight’s polling average named Trump their preferred candidate. Or were there moments along Trump’s road to victory that could have led to another outcome? They considered several moments that loom large in retrospect, starting in the final days of Trump’s presidency, and discussed how things might have gone differently.
Persons: Nikki Haley’s, Donald Trump, wasn’t, Trump, Trump’s, Mitch McConnell’s Organizations: Republican
Immediately after the polls closed on Saturday night, CNN projected that the former South Carolina governor had come up short to Trump. During the fourth quarter of 2023, Haley out-raised Trump, $24 million to $19 million. In January 2024, as the rest of the GOP field winnowed, Haley’s fundraising again bested Trump’s, $9.8 million to $8.8 million. To her credit, Haley has taken dead aim at both Trump and Putin, accusing the former of emboldening the latter. During the 2016 South Carolina primary, there were still six serious candidates in the GOP race.
Persons: Geoff Duncan, CNN — Nikki Haley’s, Donald Trump, Trump, Haley, Trump’s, Haley —, Joe Biden, Time, Biden, Nancy Pelosi, Alexey Navalny, Vladimir Putin, Putin, “ Vladimir Putin, there’s Organizations: CNN, GOP, America’s Conservative Party, South, Trump, ABC, White, Republican, PBS, Marist, NATO Locations: South Carolina, Egypt, Mexico, Hungary, Turkey, month’s, Hampshire, Russia, Carolina
Read previewFormer UN ambassador Nikki Haley's popularity has taken a hit in her home state of South Carolina, a worrying sign ahead of a critical primary race against former President Donald Trump, a new poll reported. According to a Washington Post-Monmouth University poll, Haley's popularity has dropped 31 percentage points in just under five months. FiveThirtyEight's weighted average show Trump with a roughly 31-point lead in South Carolina. Still, Haley's standing among South Carolina Republicans underlines Trump's strength in the race. While she may be the state's former governor, the former president has also secured the endorsements of almost the entire South Carolina congressional delegation.
Persons: , Nikki Haley's, Donald Trump, Haley, Trump's, Ron DeSantis, Trump Organizations: Service, UN, Washington Post, Monmouth University, Trump, Business, Florida Gov, South Carolina Republicans, GOP Locations: South Carolina, Monmouth, New Hampshire
Read previewFormer President Donald Trump on Tuesday defeated Nikki Haley in New Hampshire — a state that the former South Carolina governor clearly needed to win. "Could somebody please explain to Nikki Haley that she lost — and lost really badly," Trump wrote on Truth Social early on Wednesday morning. Donald Trump: Nikki Haley "appointed you Tim...and you're the senator of her state...You must really hate her!" It's a strategy he employed last weekend when he invited South Carolina Gov. (McMaster had already endorsed Trump before Haley formally entered the presidential race last year.)
Persons: , Donald Trump, Nikki Haley, Haley, Trump, South Carolina Sen, Tim Scott, Scott, Tim, Henry McMaster, McMaster, she's, Joe Biden Organizations: Service, Tuesday, South, Business, Truth, South Carolina Gov, GOP Locations: New Hampshire, South Carolina, Iowa
Polls show Trump still has a double-digit lead ahead of Tuesday's New Hampshire primary. AdvertisementNew Hampshire is only the second state to vote in the 2024 Republican presidential primary, but some of former President Donald Trump's foes already look desperate. Iowa's Republican caucuses were the first contest, but New Hampshire has gone to great lengths to ensure its primary election is always the first primary. The biggest difference is that unlike Iowa, New Hampshire has a more open primary system. New Hampshire also doesn't have anywhere near the number of white evangelical conservatives that vote in the Republican primary as Iowa does.
Persons: Nikki Haley's, , Donald Trump's, Nikki Haley, Ron DeSantis, Trump, Haley, Chris Sununu, Joe Biden's, Sen, John McCain, It's, Chris Christie, DeSantis Organizations: Trump, Former UN, Service, Republican, UN, Press, Democratic National Committee, New, New Hampshire Democrats, New Jersey Gov Locations: Tuesday's, Hampshire, South Carolina, New Hampshire, Granite, Dixville, Iowa, Iowa ? New Hampshire, American, Iowa , New Hampshire, In Iowa, . New Hampshire, Granite State, New Jersey, — Iowa, New Hampshire , Nevada
"A lot of people on Wall Street have been living in this pipe dream of Trump not getting the nomination. "It's painful for me to admit this, but Wall Street is basically nonchalant to this election," longtime Wall Street executive and former Trump communications director Anthony Scaramucci said in a recent interview with The Hill. An outside effort "will not work against Trump," one of DeSantis' Wall Street fundraisers said. "The next question is, 'will Wall Street work to stop him in the general by supporting Biden?'" In 2020, Wall Street executives combined to donate over $74 million to helping Biden defeat Trump.
Persons: Donald Trump, Jamie Dimon, Andrew Harrer, Joe Biden, Trump, Biden, Anthony Scaramucci, Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, Sonnenfeld, Wall, Ron DeSantis, Nikki Haley, DeSantis, Donald Trump , Jr, Woody Johnson, Haley, Trump's, Ken Langone, Langone, Marco Bello, Jeffrey Yass, Charles Myers, Dimon Organizations: JPMorgan Chase &, White, Bloomberg, Getty, Republican, Wall Street, Democratic, Trump, Yale School of Management, Florida Gov, U.N, Street, Jets, Biden, New, Granite State, Big Apple, CNBC, Financial Times, U.S, United, Reuters, Republicans, Susquehanna International Group, JPMorgan, NATO, Economic Locations: Washington, Wall, New Hampshire, South Carolina, Iowa, New York, Granite, West Des Moines , Iowa, U.S, Yass, China
I’m gutted to see Condé Nast folding the online music magazine Pitchfork into GQ. I won’t try to improve on the eulogies written for the site already (Casey Newton and Eric Harvey have good ones). It’s one of the few corners of the internet I still love, no matter how often I find myself in disagreement. I’ve seen some thoughtful writing already on why Pitchfork couldn’t make it. In this case, they’re specific to Pitchfork’s editorial choices and market position.
Persons: Condé Nast, Casey Newton, Eric Harvey, HuffPost, FiveThirtyEight Organizations: Pitchfork, GQ, New York Times, Sports, BuzzFeed, Popular, U.S . News, Gawker, ABC News, Grid, , Vox Media, McClatchy, Los Angeles Times, Baltimore Sun, Dallas Morning News Locations: U.S
Such qualms grew more vocal after voter revulsion toward MAGA candidates cost Republicans their prophesied red wave in 2022. He had too much of an edge sometimes.” Perkins was clearly rooting for Ron DeSantis, who represented the shining hope of a post-Trump religious right. But there’s not going to be a post-Trump religious right — at least, not anytime soon. Evangelical leaders who started their alliance with Trump on a transactional basis, then grew giddy with their proximity to power, have now seen MAGA devour their movement whole. But this year, according to FiveThirtyEight’s polling average, Trump leads his nearest Republican rivals by more than 30 points.
Persons: Tim Alberta’s, Donald Trump, Robert Jeffress, First Baptist Dallas —, , Trump boosterism —, , , MAGA, Mike Evans, ” Tony Perkins, Trump, Perkins, ” Perkins, Ron DeSantis, there’s, George W, Bush, Mike Huckabee, Rick Santorum, Ted Cruz Organizations: Christian, First Baptist, Texas, The Washington Post, Trump, Family Research, Evangelical, Republican Locations: American, The, Alberta, Iowa
Denmark's Saxo Bank published its annual list of outrageous predictions Tuesday. They flagged risks including an AI deepfake security crisis and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. winning the US presidential election. Headlining the bank's predictions this year are Robert F. Kennedy Jr. winning the 2024 presidential election and the rise of generative AI sparking a national security crisis in the US. Meanwhile, Saxo sees a high-profile government official getting tricked by AI deepfake technology, triggering a national security crisis. "Outrageous predictions are a deliberate effort to push the boundaries of market participants' imaginations and prepare them for any eventuality," Saxo added.
Persons: Robert F, Kennedy Jr, , Saxo, , Joe Biden, Donald Trump, John Hardy, Hardy, Peter Garnry Organizations: Denmark's Saxo Bank, Service, RFK, Big Tech, New York Times, EU Locations: Wall, Silicon, FiveThirtyEight
"I'm here to tell the truth about the Biden-Harris record," Newsom said in the early minutes of the debate. "It was more of a spectacle than a debate," Akhavan said. DeSantis has also taunted Newsom to "throw his hat in the ring" and run for president in 2024 against President Joe Biden. According to a FiveThirtyEight average of national Republican presidential polls, Trump leads 60% while DeSantis sits at 12.6%. In April, a group of wealthy GOP donors appeared to sour on their support for DeSantis, questioning his presidential prospects.
Persons: Gavin Newsom, Ron DeSantis, They're, Sean Hannity, , Gavin Newsom sparred, aren't, DeSantis, Donald Trump, Nikki Haley, Newsom isn't, Newsom, Kambiz Akhavan, Akhavan, Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Harris, Trump, Biden, Hannity, It's, Thomas Peterffy Organizations: Florida Gov, TV, Service, California Gov, Fox, USC Center, Biden, Trump, Republican, GOP Locations: California, Florida, America
Ron DeSantis, who is behind in Iowa, has received major endorsements in the state. Ron DeSantis has bet his political future on Iowa. The positive news came on the heels of Iowa Gov. ("Ron DeSantis and Nikki Haley have partisans. No recent nominee has failed to win Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina, or Nevada.
Persons: Ron DeSantis, Kim Reynolds, Bob Vander Plaats, , Donald Trump's, DeSantis, Reynolds, Grassley, Trump, Nikki Haley, Donald Trump, Scott Olson, trashing Reynolds, Grant Wood, Ben Jacobs, Texas Sen, Ted Cruz, Pennsylvania Sen, Rick Santorum, Mike Huckabee, Sen, Bernie Sanders, Barack Obama, Ron Brownstein, Cruz, Santorum, Huckabee, what's, Ricky Bobby, it's Organizations: Florida Gov, Iowa Gov, Trump, GOP, Service, Republican, CBS, Iowa State University, Iowa GOP, DeSantis, Getty, rockstar, Arkansas Gov, Iowa Republicans, Iowa, Hawkeye State Locations: Florida, Iowa, VFW, Texas, Pennsylvania, North Dakota, New Hampshire, South Carolina, Nevada, Hawkeye
Nikki Haley has gained real momentum for her White House campaign. The GOP is still Trump's party, so Haley will have to withstand difficult dynamics headed into 2024. NEW LOOK Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. Jeb Bush was unable to blunt Donald Trump's momentum ahead of the 2016 GOP primaries. But then came Trump, who flipped the script when he entered that year's GOP contest.
Persons: Nikki Haley, Haley, , Ron DeSantis, Donald Trump, She's, Koch, Jeb Bush, Donald, Sean Rayford, Trump, Bush, Bush , Florida Sen, Marco Rubio, Texas Sen, Ted Cruz, Bush's, Rubio, Cruz, Joe Biden, California Sen, Kamala Harris, Massachusetts Sen, Elizabeth Warren, Harris, Warren underperformed, Biden, Vermont Sen, Bernie Sanders, Pete Buttigieg, Buttigieg, Sanders soldiered, Jim Vondruska, credibly, Vivek Ramaswamy, Ramaswamy Organizations: S.C, GOP, Service, Florida Gov, Trump, Prosperity, Republican, Super, New, Vermont, South Carolina, Super Tuesday, she'll Locations: Iowa, New Hampshire, Florida, Bush , Florida, Texas, California, Massachusetts, Nevada, South, Warren, Des Moines , Iowa, Republican, New Hampshire , Iowa, South Carolina
[1/2] U.S. President Joe Biden speaks at a dinner hosted by the Human Rights Campaign at the Washington Convention Center in Washington, U.S., October 14, 2023. That good-news approach is not working, some officials inside and outside the Biden campaign say. The latest Reuters/Ispsos poll showed Biden and Trump locked in a tight race, with Trump leading Biden 51% to 49% when respondents were asked to pick between the two. "I don't fault the (Biden) campaign at all, for not wanting to get into the mud, the blood and the beer. Because you want to seem presidential," Morgan said, referring to the time it has taken the Biden campaign to step up its attacks on Trump.
Persons: Joe Biden, Ken Cedeno, Donald Trump, Biden, Trump, Ron DeSantis, Donna Brazile, Julie Chavez Rodriguez, Joe Biden's, it's, Jason Miller, it's Joe Biden, John Morgan, Morgan, Nandita Bose, Trevor Hunnicutt, Heather Timmons, Kieran Murray, Deepa Babington Organizations: Human, Washington Convention Center, REUTERS, Rights, Republican, Trump, New York Times, Biden, White, Muslim, Democratic, Reuters, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, Nazi Germany, America, Siena, U.S, Gaza, Florida
They also dug into and sorted through a blizzard of political news — particularly the new New York Times/Siena battleground-state polling with dreadful news for President Biden that has Democrats freaked out (again). I mean: Donald Trump ahead of President Biden in five of six crucial battleground states? Should Biden at this late stage consider not pursuing re-election? Nate Silver: Thanks for having me, Frank! And the answer might just be that he’s 80 years old, and that colors every impression voters have of him.
Persons: Frank Bruni, Katherine Mangu, Nate Silver, FiveThirtyEight, Biden, , Donald Trump, Nate, let’s, Frank, Biden doesn’t Organizations: Republican, New York Times, Times Locations: Siena, The
Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy speaks during the party's Florida Freedom Summit held at the Gaylord Palms Resort & Convention Center in Kissimmee, Florida, U.S., November 4, 2023. In an interview, Ramaswamy said he would formally introduce a pledge on Tuesday in Miami, on the eve of the third Republican primary date, laying out non-interventionist foreign policy principles. Ramaswamy's introduction of the pledge comes after weeks of sparring with fellow Republican presidential contender Nikki Haley, a former U.S. ambassador to the UN, over foreign policy. Ramaswamy has said Haley, who ranks third in most Republican primary polls, risks dragging America into a bloody conflict thanks to her aggressive foreign policy stances. According to polling and analysis website FiveThirtyEight, Ramaswamy has the support of 5% of Republican primary voters, while Trump is the lead with roughly 58% support.
Persons: Vivek Ramaswamy, Octavio Jones, Ramaswamy, Joe Biden, Nikki Haley, Haley, Donald Trump, Ron DeSantis, Chris Christie, Trump, Gram Slattery, Leslie Adler Organizations: Summit, Gaylord, Convention, REUTERS, Rights, Republican, Reuters, Democratic, UN, Republican Party, New, Thomson Locations: Florida, Kissimmee , Florida, U.S, Miami, Ukraine, Israel, New Jersey
Republican presidential candidate and Florida Gov. Menswear experts and others have alleged DeSantis wears lifts in his boots to make him look taller. Videos on TikTok of users giving their own thoughts on DeSantis' boots have garnered millions of views. If it was the beginning of the campaign or if DeSantis held a commanding lead, the attention to DeSantis' footwear would likely be another speed bump in a long campaign. October has come and gone, and with two months to go until the Republican presidential caucuses in Iowa, DeSantis is still miles behind Trump in national polling.
Persons: Ron DeSantis, It's, , it's, DeSantis, There's, Derek Guy, bootmakers, Donald Trump, hadn't, Trump, FiveThirtyEight Organizations: Florida Gov, Service, Disney, Republican, Fox, Lucchese, Washington Post, PAC, Trump Locations: Florida, American, Iowa
Former President Trump remains well ahead of his fellow Republican presidential contenders. But Nikki Haley is in a solid position in both GOP statewide polling and general election matchups. As other candidates leave the race, Haley's viability as a top Trump alternative will likely strengthen. Meanwhile, Haley's stock may be low, but very importantly it's up: she's averaging around 8% in the FiveThirtyEight GOP polling average, up from 3% at the beginning of August. AP Photo/Meg KinnardA Public Opinion Strategies survey of New Hampshire had Trump ahead with 44% support, with Haley in second place with 17% support.
Persons: Trump, Nikki Haley, , Nikki Haley's, Joe Biden, Ron DeSantis, Donald Trump's, Haley, she's, Meg Kinnard, Biden, DeSantis, Vivek Ramaswamy, Sen, Tim Scott of, Donald Trump, Jae Organizations: Trump, Service, South Carolina Gov, Gov, GOP, New, United Nations, AP, Boston Globe, New Hampshire, NBC, Trump White, Walt Disney Company, Sunshine State, Iowa Locations: Florida, Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina, Clive , Iowa, Suffolk, DeSantis, Tim Scott of South Carolina, Anaheim , Calif
Democratic Presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. speaks during The World Values Network's Presidential Candidate Series that discusses fighting antisemitism and championing Israel, in New York City, U.S., July 25, 2023. Kennedy's deep-pocketed backers and famous name, combined with a lack of broad enthusiasm for Biden and Trump, could help him take votes from their respective sides. "It could certainly siphon some votes from Trump, but it will certainly hurt Biden much more," said Republican strategist Ford O'Connell, who argued that Trump voters were more enthusiastic than Biden's. HIGH FAVORABILITY, TRUMP DONORKennedy has higher favorability ratings than either Trump or Biden, Reuters/Ipsos polling from September shows, with 51% of respondents having a favorable view of him compared to 45% for Biden and 40% for Trump. At 69, Kennedy might have an appeal to Americans looking for a younger candidate than Biden, 80, and Trump, 77.
Persons: Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Amr Alfiky, Democrat Joe Biden, Republican Donald Trump, Kennedy, Biden, Trump, Donald Trump’s, Matt Bennett, FiveThirtyEight, Ford O'Connell, Trump's, Paul Offit, George W, Bush, Ipsos, Cheryl Hines, Gavin de Becker, Timothy Mellon, Peter Daou, Joe Manchin, Joe Lieberman, Al Gore's, ProPublica, Lieberman, Jeff Mason, Heather Timmons, Lisa Shumaker, Grant McCool Organizations: Democratic, REUTERS, Rights, Democrat, Republican, Republicans, Trump, Independent, Biden, Health Defense, Children's, White House, Reuters, HIGH, TRUMP, RealClearPolitics, Mellon, America, Cornell West, Twitter, U.S, Thomson Locations: Israel, New York City, U.S, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Georgia, Arizona, American Samoa, West Virginia
Trump's campaign called on the Republican National Committee to halt future GOP primary debates. Trump has already skipped the first two Republican primary debates in recent months. Despite his absence, he's still the leading GOP presidential candidate. AdvertisementAdvertisementAfter choosing to skip this election cycle's first two, former President Donald Trump's 2024 campaign is pressing the Republican National Committee to cancel all of its remaining scheduled presidential primary debates. AdvertisementAdvertisementThough he has a history of missing out on debates, Trump far and away remains the GOP's leading presidential candidate in polling by a large margin.
Persons: Trump, he's, , Donald Trump's, Susie Wiles, Chris LaCivita, Joe Biden, Wiles, LaCivita, Tucker Carlson, FiveThirtyEight, Ron DeSantis Organizations: Republican National Committee, Service, Trump campaign's, RNC, Republicans, Republican, GOP, Trump, Democratic, Florida Gov Locations: Miami, California, Iowa
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