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Trump Spox Deletes Pro-Gun Control, Undocumented Immigrant Defending Twitter Account

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Trump spokeswoman Hope Hicks shared an article asking people to use the world “undocumented” instead of “illegal,” as well as several tweets advocating for stricter gun laws.

Aaron P. Bernstein / Getty Images

Before becoming the media's emissary to the Donald Trump presidential campaign, Hope Hicks maintained a now-deleted twitter account where she shared articles written by a prominent immigration-rights activist and tweeted support for stricter gun control laws.

Hicks, the subject of glowing profile in the Washington Post ("likable, loyal and resilient") last month, has been working with the Trump organization since 2012. After handling a portfolio of Trump accounts at the public relations firm Hiltzik Strategies, she joined the Trump organization full time last August.

The Post profile noted Hicks had "recently scrubbed her social media presence, a sign of her desire not to distract from Trump's candidacy, friends said," but failed to note elements of that presence.

In two separate tweets from 2012, Hicks linked to articles by Jose Antonio Vargas, an undocumented immigrant and journalist who is also a notable Hiltzik client. One article on Time argued that people should stop using the word "illegals" and instead use "undocumented." Hicks also shared an Upworthy article by Vargas with the auto-tweet, "Undocumented Americans pay over $11 billion in taxes every year. Where's the story on THAT @FoxNews?"

A former Hiltzik employee told BuzzFeed News the firm did a lot of work with Vargas. Matthew Hiltzik, the founder of the firm, was also executive producer of Vargas' film Undocumented.

The tweets are seemingly at odds with Trump's tone on immigration. When The Donald announced his presidential campaign in June, he said the Mexican government was sending rapists and drug dealers to United States. In July, he said undocumented Mexican immigrants were "taking our jobs, they're taking our manufacturing jobs, they're taking our money."

Vargas has publicly criticized Trump for his comments on immigration.

Hicks' account had several tweets that expressed support for gun control initiatives and President Obama after the shootings at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut.

Hicks didn't return a comment request.

One tweet from Hicks linked to an article by Jose Antonio Vargas on Time saying people should use "undocumented" instead of "illegals."

One tweet from Hicks linked to an article by Jose Antonio Vargas on Time saying people should use "undocumented" instead of "illegals."

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Rick Perry Insists His Campaign Is Doing Fine

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Rosie Gray

KIMBALLTON, Iowa — Republican presidential candidate Rick Perry insisted that his campaign is going strong despite the fact that he's reportedly no longer able to pay his staff, saying on Monday that many Americans can relate to his campaign's financial struggles.

"I’m figuring I can stay as long as anybody can stay," Perry told reporters at a Boots and BBQ Bash event on Monday evening, in response to a question from BuzzFeed News about how long he can keep campaigning despite his campaign's financial problems. "I’m pretty sure that most Americans have had some ups and downs in their business before, have had some challenges before. Certainly I have in all of my campaigns, and this one’s no different. I’ve got some great people working for me, some folks that are volunteering for us."

"I think the question is, how much of a campaign are all these other folks gonna be able to run with their hundreds of millions of dollars?" Perry said. "What we’re talking about is a real grassroots campaign."

"Whether or not you’ve had some challenges in your finances — show me an American that hasn’t?" Perry said.

Perry has struggled to gain any traction among the crowded Republican field this election cycle and didn't poll high enough to make it onto the main primary debate in Cleveland earlier this month. Compounding this is the fact that Perry's fundraising has lagged to the point that he is no longer paying his staff, who are now working on a volunteer basis.

Perry is spending three days campaigning in Iowa this week, and told reporters here that he partly blamed his loss in 2012 on not spending enough time here early enough.

"I came in here in 2011 and the other candidates had been here, they’d been working, they’d put their teams together," he said. "I had a huge hole and I never dug out of it."

Despite the fact that Perry was an early critic among the candidates of frontrunner Donald Trump, blasting him as a "barking carnival act" in a speech last month, he didn't mention him during his speech to the crowd in Kimballton at the event also attended by Carly Fiorina. Perry did talk about immigration, an issue that has become a lightning rod in the primary as Trump's statements have started to pull other candidates rightward, though he mostly stuck to talking about securing the border.

Perry described asking the president to meet with him last year.

"I wanted the president to come and see what was going on on that border, see the literally tens of thousands of people who were showing up on that border, most of them, I will suggest to you — and it's been proven up — were sent up there by the drug cartels and the transnational gangs to get our law enforcement and our border patrol distracted so that they could do their evil deeds," Perry said. He said that after meeting with the president for five minutes, he could tell he wasn't going to do anything, so "I looked him in the eye and I said, Mr. President, if you don't secure the border, Texas will."

Asked about Trump's new immigration plan that would end birthright citizenship and force Mexico to pay for a border wall, Perry told reporters, "I’m a big believer that Americans are looking for solutions and they’re looking for solutions that are quickly attained. And anybody’s that talking about anything other than getting the border secure and really laying out a detailed way to do that is missing the whole point. You go to where the problem is. As a governor I’ve been dealing with this for 14 years."

"I understand that the federal government's failure to secure the border is the reason we had to deal with issues of education, the reason that we had to deal with issues of healthcare, the reason we had to deal with issues of crime," Perry said. "So all of these are symptoms of the real challenge, and the challenge is get the border secure. I know how to do that."

Perry said that after the border is secured, then "you can address the challenges because the challenges will be substantially less."

Asked about Trump's plan for a Mexico-funded border wall, Perry didn't comment on it directly, saying, "I know how to secure the border. And we’ll do it quickly."

#BlackLivesMatter Boston Releases First Videos Of Exchange With Clinton

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“Look, I don’t believe you change hearts. I believe you change laws, you change allocation of resources, you change the way systems operate. You’re not going to change every heart. You’re not,” Clinton told three activists in New Hampshire last week. On Tuesday, the Clinton campaign released a transcript of the full exchange.

Brian Snyder / Reuters

Late Monday, Black Lives Matter Boston released the first video from the closed-door encounter between Hillary Clinton and activists with the group.

Activists met with Clinton on Aug. 11, following a town hall in Keene, N.H. on drug abuse. They had wanted to enter the event, and were going to be allowed in, but opted for a few private moments with Clinton.

The activists appeared on The Rachel Maddow Show Monday to talk about the encounter and release some video of the exchange. Currently, there does not appear to be one, full, unedited video of the entire interaction.

In the video released, the activists tell Clinton about an "extremely long history of unfortunate government practices that don't work that particularly affect black people and black families, and until we as a country, and then the person who's in the seat that you seek, actually addresses the anti-blackness current that is America's first drug —" and then the activist referenced the coincidence that the town hall was, in fact, about drugs.

In the portion of the video released, Clinton says there was a climate, in the '80s and 90s, "very serious crime" that was "impacting primarily communities of color and poor people. And part of it was that there was just not enough attention paid."

She suggested that her job as a candidate for president is to present solutions to the American people and draw support behind the politics.

"And you know, in life, in politics, in government, you name it, you've got to be constantly asking yourself, 'Is this working?' she said. "Is this not?' And if it's not what do we do better? And that's what I'm trying to do now on drugs, on mass incarceration, on police behavior and criminal justice reform."

Here's the video from MSNBC:

Here are the videos the activists released through GOOD:

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Rubio: “Everyone Laughed” At Kerry For Saying Dollar Threatened If Iran Deal Doesn’t Pass

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“Yeah, that’s silly.”

Bryan Thomas / Getty Images

Florida Sen. Marco Rubio says Secretary of State John Kerry's comment that the dollar will suffer if the United States walks away from the Iran nuclear deal are worthy of, and have received, much mockery.

"Yeah, that's silly," Rubio told radio host Glenn Beck on Monday. "That's a silly thing for him to say. I mean, it's just absurd."

Kerry was quoted by Reuters as saying the dollar's status as the world's reserve currency could be challenged if the U.S. went back on the deal but kept in place sanctions.

"If we turn around and nix the deal and then tell them, 'You're going to have to obey our rules and sanctions anyway,' that is a recipe, very quickly … for the American dollar to cease to be the reserve currency of the world," Kerry declared.

"Everyone laughed at him when he said it, including people around the world in the financial market," Rubio continued. "Our reserve status has nothing to do with our relationship with Iran or anyone else for that matter. And it's just really an absurd statement."

President Obama made similar comments last week, saying the idea of the U.S. walking away from the Iran deal but keeping tough, unilateral sanctions imposed was a fantasy.

"We cannot dictate the foreign, economic and energy policies of every major power in the world," said the president ."In order to even try to do that, we would have to sanction, for example, some of the world's largest banks. We'd have to cut off countries like China from the American financial system. And since they happen to be major purchasers of our debt, such actions could trigger severe disruptions in our own economy, and, by way, raise questions internationally about the dollar's role as the world's reserve currency. That's part of the reason why many of the previous unilateral sanctions were waived."

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Lindsey Graham: No Death Penalty For CT Home Invaders “Makes Me Want To Throw Up”

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“I don’t know how the judges can live with themselves…”

Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham says the Connecticut Supreme Court decision that the death penalty violates the state's constitution -- sparing the perpetrators of a horrific 2007 home invasion and murder from execution -- makes him physically ill.

Steven Hayes and Joshua Komisarjevsky were both sentenced to death for killing and setting on fire Jennifer Hawke-Petit and her daughters Hayley, 17, and Michaela, 11.

"Makes me want to throw up. Makes me want to throw up when I hear that putting these two guys to death for what they did to that family is somehow outside of the standards of decency," Graham stated Monday to radio host Michael Medved.

"You know, society has the ability and the right to protect itself against wrongdoers," continued Graham. "We have a criminal justice system that's supposed to give everyone a fair trial, but when the case is over and the person's been found guilty dispose of the case for the punishment consistent with the crime."

The Connecticut state legislature repealed the death penalty for any future crimes in 2012, but the state supreme court's decision spared the lives of 11 Connecticut death row inmates who had been sentenced before the death penalty was repealed.

"If this doesn't cry out for the death penalty nothing ever would and I don't think you're an indecent society when you take two men who broke into a family's home, tortured two young girls, raped them, burned them alive -- I don't think that makes us indecent that they would be administered the death penalty," declared Graham.

"It is such an outrage to me. I don't know how the judges can live with themselves, but the law is the law," he added. "You know if I'm president of the United States, under my administration, my Attorney General - we're going to prosecute people like this to the fullest extent of the law. I doubt if there's any federal jurisdiction in a case like this, but it would be worth looking at."

Graham further questioned the legal training of the judges.

"What kind of legal training have they had," he said. "What upbringing has allowed to arrive at the conclusion that those two people, killing them through the judicial system that imposes the death penalty somehow makes us an indecent society?"

Here's the audio:

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Hillary Clinton On If She Wiped Her Server: "Like With A Cloth Or Something?"

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Clinton answered questions about the investigation over the security of the personal server that housed her email during her time as secretary of state.

As Clinton was walking away, a reporter pressed her on the issue of her server not going away for the remainder of the campaign.

vine.co


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Chelsea Manning Found Guilty Of Prison Charges, Gets Three Weeks Of Restricted Activities

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Charges stemmed from conduct in dining facility and unauthorized materials in her cell.

WASHINGTON — Chelsea Manning received three weeks of restricted activities after being found guilty of four charges of prison misconduct, she tweeted on Tuesday.

The four charges include three "category III" charges: prohibited property, medicine misuse, and disorderly conduct. The fourth charge, labeled as "category IV," is for disrespect.

One of her lawyers, ACLU attorney Chase Strangio, told BuzzFeed News that while Manning did not receive any time in solitary confinement as punishment — a possibility supporters had been decrying — she did receive 21 days of "loss of privileges," which Manning tweeted means no gym, library, or time outdoors.

Manning is serving a 35-year prison sentence at the United States Disciplinary Barracks at Ft. Leavenworth, Kansas. She was convicted of violations of the Espionage Act and other offenses in July 2013 after leaking thousands of classified documents to WikiLeaks.

Ohio Intended To Illegally Import Execution Drugs, FDA Letter Says

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An FDA document says Ohio intends to import the drug, citing “information received by the agency.” It’s illegal to import the drug.

Ohio's previous death chamber at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility.

Kiichiro Sato / AP

The Ohio Department of Corrections intended to illegally import drugs for executions, according to an FDA letter obtained by BuzzFeed News. Ohio is now the second known state to have moved toward buying sodium thiopental overseas — the other being Nebraska.

In a June letter, the FDA wrote to Ohio, warning the state that importing the drugs would be illegal.

"Please note that there is no FDA approved application for sodium thiopental, and it is illegal to import an unapproved new drug into the United States," wrote Domenic Veneziano, the director of FDA's import operation.

The letter, which was sent to the head of the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction, was obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request. A department spokesperson did not respond when asked if the state still intends to import the drug.

Letter from FDA to the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction

In similar letters to Nebraska and its Indian drug supplier, the FDA cited "media reports" as the source of its information that the state was attempting to import execution drugs. However, the letter to Ohio cited only "information received by the agency." The FDA declined to specify how officials were tipped off.

The prison Ohio carries out executions in registered for a DEA license to import the drug last year for a "law enforcement purpose," but until now it was unknown if the state actually intended to use the license.

Ohio, like many other death penalty states, shrouds its execution drug suppliers in secrecy. States argue the secrecy protects their suppliers from intimidation and embarrassment, while death row inmates and open government advocates argue it removes an important check on state power.

At this point, the identity of Ohio's intended supplier is unknown. Nebraska paid more than $50,000 for hundreds of executions' worth of sodium thiopental from an Indian dealer named Chris Harris. According to emails from Harris and the DEA, Harris sold to at least one other state as well.

When approached by BuzzFeed News about Harris in June, Ohio DRC spokesperson JoEllen Smith said the department's legal division would have to handle the matter. After spending weeks on the request, she only would say that Ohio had not communicated with Harris's company, Harris Pharma, but did not specifically answer the question of if the state had purchased from him directly or indirectly. Smith did not respond to follow up questions.

Ohio Gov. John Kasich and Attorney General Mike DeWine's offices would not answer questions either, deferring to the Department of Rehabilitation and Correction.

As many reputable drug options have dried up in recent years, states have become desperate, turning to questionable, and at times illegal, sources in attempting to carry out executions. Sodium thiopental's lone FDA-approved manufacturer stopped making the drug in 2011 in an attempt to keep the drug out of the hands of death penalty states.

Ohio has not carried out an execution since January 2014 — a 26-minute execution using different drugs in which the inmate gasped, snorted and appeared to struggle against his restraints. The state ditched that drug combination and is scheduled to begin a new round of executions in 2016.

Meanwhile, Nebraska has maintained that the state will still be able to import the drugs, in spite of the FDA's warnings, and in spite of the legislature repealing the death penalty this year.

In letters to Ohio, Nebraska, and Harris, the FDA directs officials to a 2012 court ruling that the FDA must refuse admission of sodium thiopental, as it is not approved by the drug agency. Before the ruling, the FDA had allowed several shipments in, arguing that FDA's oversight is limited to the medical field, not executions.


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Hillary Clinton Brings On Latino Polling Firm In Key Hire

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The Clinton campaign continues its focus on Hispanic voters with the addition of polling firm Latino Decisions, BuzzFeed news has learned.

John Locher / AP

Hillary Clinton's campaign is bolstering its growing Latino outreach apparatus, tapping polling firm Latino Decisions to gauge attitudes of the Hispanic community, two sources tell BuzzFeed News.

The firm, led by political scientists and professors Matt Barreto and Gary Segura, has worked with immigration groups and unions like America's Voice and SEIU, as well as National Council of La Raza, Univision and the progressive Center for American Progress on polls.

The deal came through after weeks of back and forth negotiations between Latino Decisions and the campaign. Only Segura and Barreto are joining the Clinton team and the campaign contacted other contenders for the Latino polling role to tell them of its decision. The Clinton campaign did not respond to a request for comment by publication.

While the pollsters have been hired by groups on the left, they have not shied away from being critical of the Democratic Party, particularly after the disastrous 2014 midterm election and also presented an immigration stance Clinton eventually embraced at a major Nevada event during the Spring.

Latino Decisions found that 2014 featured low turnout and enthusiasm for Hispanic voters, compared to the 2010 midterm, and said it should be a wake-up call to Democrats to work hard to connect with Latinos, arguing that doing just that helped Sen. Harry Reid in Nevada in 2010 and Obama in 2012.

In a February presentation to the DNC's Hispanic caucus entitled "Winning The Latino Vote In A Post-Obama Environment," Barreto said broad support of Clinton by Hispanic voters hinged on whether she would embrace Obama's 2012 and 2014 executive actions on immigration or reject them.

In May, Clinton said she supported Obama's executive actions to shield millions of undocumented immigrants, which included parents of U.S. citizens, from deportation and said she would go further if Congress won't take up an immigration overhaul.

Democrats said the hire further signaled that the campaign will work hard to understand Latino attitudes, which differ among ethnic groups and across states, from Florida to Nevada.

Andres Ramirez, a 20-year Nevada veteran strategist, said many pollsters have similar techniques but "there's a difference when you're working with a firm that understands the political and cultural nuances of a particular constituency group."

He cited the call centers organizations use to call prospective voters and said Latino Decisions knows, for example, that having "a Cuban in Miami call a Chicano voter in LA" isn't a good idea because they might not be as forthcoming speaking to someone who doesn't sound like them and because the answers could be misinterpreted by the caller.

Democrats noted that this was the first time Latino Decisions was joining a campaign, giving Clinton props for bringing on a group that has never work at this level before.

Latino Decisions

Hispanic conservatives were good-natured in their ribbing of Latino Decisions, with Republican strategist Luis Alvarado saying "I guess the jig is up" and Alfonso Aguilar, a former official in the George W. Bush administration, adding this was "their coming out" as Democratic pollsters.

But Aguilar, who has met Barreto, said Democrats would be wise to listen to him.

"I think he's objective, he'll open the eyes of Democrats and say 'If you think you have a hold on the Latino vote you better think again,'" he said. "That's the value Matt has."

Like all pollsters, Latino Decisions has been right and wrong. In 2010, Nate Silver wrote about how polls had underestimated Latino support for Harry Reid over Sharron Angle, after hearing from Barreto.

But in 2014, the polling firm floated that former Colorado senator Mark Udall was winning his race against Cory Gardner because the Latino vote was being miscalculated.

Gardner won the race, with a later joint Latino Decisions/NCLR/America's Voice poll saying Udall didn't do enough to differentiate himself from his opponent on immigration.

In their 2014 book, Latino America, Segura and Barreto argued that American politics in the 21st century will be shaped in large part "by how Latinos are incorporated into the political system."

The duo looked at how Latino attitudes differ across generational lines, whether they're immigrants or U.S. born, ethnicity, and in how they view the role of government.

They also analyzed the 2008 Democratic primary between Obama and Clinton.

It's often forgotten that Clinton beat Obama 2-to-1 among Hispanic voters in 2008, and Latino Decisions said her standing with them never wavered, because "three out of four Latino primary voters liked Hillary Clinton," giving her a strong advantage.

In the book, Hispanic voters are called her "Latino firewall," and her win in Texas, where the electorate was 33% Hispanic, helped her extend the hard fought primary.

Now with Bernie Sanders showing strength, Nevada and its one-third Latino electorate could serve a similar purpose, with the campaign bringing on operatives with experience in Nevada, like state director Emmy Ruiz, organizing director Jorge Neri, and Hispanic media director Jorge Silva, who joined this week from Reid's office.

In their book, Barreto and Segura said Clinton's strong performance could be credited to her extraordinary name recognition and effective Latino outreach effort.

Seven years later, the group is joining that effort.


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Donald Trump Fabricated A Near-Death Experience, Three Biographies Say

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“I can get some publicity out of this,” Trump is alleged to have said after three of his executives died in a helicopter accident.

Charles Rex Arbogast / ASSOCIATED PRESS

It's a harrowing tale of real estate mogul Donald Trump narrowly escaping death: After meeting with Trump casino executives Stephen Hyde, Mark Grossinger Etess, and Jonathan Benanav, Trump at the last minute decides to not join them on their helicopter ride back to Atlantic City.

Sitting in his office after the meeting on the construction of the Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City, Trump gets a call from one of his executives' secretaries -- it's an hour and a half later and the executives are nowhere to be found. Trump, not thinking much of it, assumes there's some sort of mix up.

A call comes again, it's the secretary, saying the company that leased the helicopter says it's down. Trump knows that choppers go down all the time for repairs, he's still not fazed, until the next call comes from a reporter.

"Five dead, Mr. Trump. Do you have a comment?" the reporter asks.

The detail of Trump's decision not to go on the flight at the last minute made its way into press accounts and a cover of the NY Daily News. At the time, news accounts attributed the detail of Trump's near-death decision to Trump sources or just stated it as a matter of fact. Even more cited Trump's own spokesman to make the claim.

A UPI wire story cited "sources" to say Trump was scheduled to be on the flight.

"He really doesn't want to talk about it, but he was going to go to Atlantic City and he did change his mind," Dan Klores a Trump spokesman said to the Philadelphia Inquirer in one report.

According to at least three biographies on Trump, however, that detail is a complete fabrication.

"Donald is still sitting in his office commiserating with some of his staff when he gets a call from yet another reporter," reads Harry Hurt's biography of The Donald, Lost Tycoon. "He switches on the speakerphone so that he can hear what the reporter is saying but puts on the mute button so the reporter cannot hear what is being said in the Trump Tower office."

"Mr. Trump, I know this must be horrible for you," the book quotes a reporter on the other line "I know it must be terrible for you to lose your three top casino executives all in the same day. I'm so sorry about what happened...I guess the only thing that could have been worse is if you had been on the helicopter with them."

Trump, according to the book, then looked at one of his vice presidents and said he needed to get publicity out of the incident.

"You're going to hate me for this," Trump is alleged to have said. "But I just can't resist. I can get some publicity out of this."

"Then Donald releases the mute button on his speakerphone and informs the reporter, 'You know, I was going to go with them on that helicopter…' Donald goes on to confide that for some unexplained reason he changed his mind and decided not to go," the book reads.

"The next morning Donald's 'revelation' will appear in a caption on the front page of the New York Daily News beneath photographs of the three dead men: 'Trump decided not to go at the last minute," Hurt writes.

The book cites "a half a dozen bona fide sources close to Trump" to call the claim a "barefaced lie." According to the book, Trump had a meeting that afternoon and couldn't have been on the flight.

Hurt's claim is backed up in investigative reporter Wayne Barrett's book The Deals And The Downfall.

"Donald seemed to be personally traumatized by the disaster - saying publicly that it 'cheapened life' for him, showing him just how fragile everything was," Barrett's biography reads, another claim that is backed up by Hurt.

The book points out that Trump trusted only his personal helicopter for transportation.

"His attitude toward the tragedy shifted, though, from moments when it seemed to move him deeply to times when he did not hesitate to use it for personal advantage," reads the book "He planted stories suggesting that he had almost boarded the chartered copter himself, though he'd never ridden to Atlantic City on one, trusting only his Puma."

Another account, a tell-all book written by former Trump Plaza Hotel & Casino president John R. O'Donnell in the 1990s, makes the same claim.

Even at the time, Trump's tale was disputed by members of his own company.

"Trump had definitely never planned to be on it," said Bernie Dillion, the vice president of Trump Sports and Entertainment to the Associated Press at the time.

In his book Surviving at the Top, released a year later, Trump characterized his plans to get on the helicopter and his decision ultimately not to as a passing thought.

"Then Steve, who was one of the hardest-working guys I ever met, said, 'Donald, we've got to run now. We've got to catch a helicopter,'" Trump writes in his book.

"I very casually look up and said, 'I'll see you guys over the weekend,'" he continues.

"For an instant, as they were walking out, I thought of going with them. I fly down to Atlantic City at least once a week, and I knew that if I made the forty-five minute helicopter trip then, we could continue talking business on the way. But there was just too much to do in the office that day. As quickly as the idea had popped into my mind, I decided not to go. Instead I just said good-bye and went back to reading reports and making phone calls."

A Trump campaign spokeswoman didn't return a request for comment.

Martin O'Malley Slams "Coronation" Of Clinton As Democratic Nominee

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“What the hell have we come to as a Democratic Party that we’re trying to cut off debates and turn our primary into a coronation rather than an exchange of ideas?”

Win Mcnamee / Getty Images

Democratic presidential candidate Martin O'Malley on Tuesday continued his attacks on national Democrats for what he says is an attempt to hand Hillary Clinton the party's nomination.

The former Maryland governor called the current structure -- the Democratic National Committee will hold only six primary debates -- "a coronation rather than an exchange of ideas."

"I have called upon Secretary Clinton in fact herself to call for more debates and the silence has been deafening," O'Malley told 1450AM radio in New Hampshire on Tuesday.

O'Malley said that until there are debates, questions over Benghazi and Clinton's emails will continue to overshadow news about candidate's positions and policy proposals on issues that matter to voters.

"This is the key issue in this race and we actually are advancing ideas, some of us, that will get wages to go up rather than down, that will make it easier for people to join unions and bargain collectively for better wages, that will cut our youth unemployment rate in half in three years with a universal access to national service," O'Malley stated. "These are the things that we need to be talking about and until we start having debates we're instead just going to see this year's inevitable frontrunner answering character questions from the 19 people running for the Republican nomination and their Fox News network."

"It's really, really shortsighted of the DNC and I think all of us as candidates have a responsibility not to abide by this silly restriction that New Hampshire only gets to have one debate before the primary," he declared. "What the hell have we come to as a Democratic Party that we're trying to cut off debates and turn our primary into a coronation rather than an exchange of ideas?"

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Bernie Sanders Is America's Jeremy Corbyn

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Two socialist men are leading youthful left-wing insurgencies against establishment candidates. BuzzFeed UK’s Jim Waterson attempts to understand US politics.

U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders speaks in Iowa.

Jim Young / Reuters

DUBUQUE, Iowa – Jeremy Corbyn's influence is spreading to the US.

Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders has said he is aware of the rise of the left-wing British MP, currently favourite to win the Labour party leadership contest, and says he sees parallels between his campaign and the current state of left-wing politics in the UK.

"Whether it's the UK or here in the US, people are sick and tired of establishment politics," Sanders told BuzzFeed News on the campaign trail in Iowa. "They are sick and tired of a politics in which people continue to represent the rich and the powerful."

For a British observer, watching Sanders is like watching Corbyn two months ago – a candidate drawing enormous crowds but still dismissed as an unelectable crank by the mainstream media and political establishment. In the UK that changed when it was realised that the enormous rallies and social media backing was actually turning into real support at the polls.

Just as Corbyn unexpectedly took the lead in the Labour leadership, so Sanders is surprising the Democratic establishment by leading Hillary Clinton in early polls in Iowa and New Hampshire.

"Our campaign has taken the political establishment by surprise," Sanders shouted at a crowd of five hundred packed into a sports centre in the Iowan town of Dubuque. "Three and a half months ago they asked if there was an appetite to stand up to the billionaire class. Guess what? Turns out there is!"

Watch both Sanders and Corbyn speak, and the parallels are easy: Both are self-described socialists who spent decades on the fringes of politics and reluctantly entered the race to lead their party three months ago. Both have the demeanour of a university protestor approaching retirement and unexpectedly found themselves capturing the attention of young supporters who were disillusioned with the mainstream left's choice of candidates.

They both get massive cheers for bringing up their votes against the Iraq war, for saying inequality is a scourge, big banks need to broken up, public healthcare needs defending, and university tuition fees should be free. Sanders is less radical than Corbyn's unashamed socialism, but both have a message that is packing out massive rallies of grassroots supporters in unexpected places on both sides of the Atlantic.

"Every other candidate seems to be the same and connected with big money," said Sanders supporter Mark Weis, a lifelong Democrat who won't vote for Clinton because of her establishment connections. "What appeals to us is he isn't accepting money from big business. If Bernie doesn't make it we won't vote for Hillary."

Sanders and Corbyn supporters both want the real left-wing deal, believe they've found it, and are willing to reject any alternatives.

But unlike the favourite to be Labour leader, Sanders supporters are honest about his chances of taking the nominations. While Sanders supporters cheer his refusal to solicit large financial donations, it's likely to hinder his chances of beating Clinton in the long-run.

Labour Party leadership candidate Jeremy Corbyn talks to waiting media in Ealing.

Peter Nicholls / Reuters

Sanders' main target is the "grotesque level of wealth and income inequality" in the U.S. In Dubuque he raised the topic of the "United Kingdom with their Queens and their Kings and their Dukes".

He let his audience imagine a land of such entrenched elitism before dropping the punchline: "We have more income inequality even than they do."

At the back of the venue a man exclaimed: "Oh my god! Oh my god! How is that even possible?"

There were massive cheers for a $70 billion pledge to end tuition fees at public universities ("We'll put a tax on Wall Street speculation, which will bring in substantially more money"), an attack on the coverage of his campaign ("establishment economics and establishment media"), plus a fair dollop of economic protectionism ("You can't shut down factories and then move to low-wage countries").

"All over this country people are working and not making enough money to feed their families," Sanders thundered. "It is not a radical idea to say that if someone works 40 hours a week that person should not be living in poverty."


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Clinton's Claim Father Attended College On Football Scholarship Contradicted By University

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Family lore makes its way into Clinton’s stump speech.

Isaac Brekken / Getty Images

At a town hall in Las Vegas on Tuesday, Hillary Clinton told the audience that her father, Hugh Rodham, attended college on a football scholarship -- a claim that is contradicted by the school's records.

"You know I'm the granddaughter of a factory worker from Scranton, Pennsylvania," Clinton said. "My grandfather worked in the lace mills in Scranton. He worked really hard from the time he was a teenager till he retired in '65. He always believed his hard work would pay off, and it would pay off for his kids. So my dad got to go to college, it was on a football scholarship, but he still got to go to college."

Rodham did earn a letter and play football at Penn State, but as Carl Bernstein reported in his 2007 biography of Clinton, the school did not award football scholarships during Rodham's time there. (Hugh Rodham, Bernstein also reported, had a history of exaggeration.)

"Hugh Rodham was not on a football scholarship," Jeff Nelson, an associate athletic director at the school told BuzzFeed News. "Penn State ended scholarships with the incoming freshman class of 1928 and did not resume scholarships until the incoming freshman class of 1949. Mr. Rodham earned a letter in 1934."

Penn State removed scholarships after a Carnegie Foundation report said that subsidizing student athletes was "the darkest blot upon American college sport."

Clinton has mentioned her father's football scholarship in the past, including in a campaign speech during her first presidential run.

"I remember, how homesick and lonely I was when I went to college. My mother had never gone to college," Clinton said in a New Hampshire speech in 2007. "My father went to college on a football scholarship, so that didn't exactly relate to my experience."

Dozens of mainstream media outlets such as the New York Times, LA Times, Associated Press, and numerous biographies also have presented the claim as fact over the course of the Clinton's time in public life.

A Clinton spokesman responded last evening with for a comment request with, "not ignoring you. Give us a few." They did not respond to follow up comment requests.

Progressive Groups Ask Obama To End Bush-Era Religious Protection

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Obama asked to reverse legal memo providing exemption to nondiscrimination laws for religious groups seeking federal grants. The letter, provided exclusively to BuzzFeed News, is signed by 130 civil rights and other groups.

Mark Wilson / Getty Images

WASHINGTON — On Thursday morning, 130 civil rights and religious organizations, unions, and other progressive groups sent a letter to President Obama urging that he direct the Justice Department to reverse a Bush-era legal opinion about the scope of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act.

The 2007 memo from the Office of Legal Counsel concluded that, under RFRA, religious organizations seeking federal grants could not be forced to adhere to religious nondiscrimination laws in hiring.

The 130 organizations — including the ACLU, Anti-Defamation League, Human Rights Campaign, NAACP, and Planned Parenthood — counter in their letter to Obama that the opinion "relies on flawed legal analysis" that RFRA "provides a blanket override of a statutory non-discrimination provision." A copy of the letter was provided to BuzzFeed News.

Members of the group have been asking the Justice Department or White House to rescind the OLC Memo since Obama took office, but this is the first time that the letter has been sent directly to the president. Previous letters were sent to then-Attorney General Eric Holder, as in 2009 and 2014, as well as to the head of the White House Office of Faith-based and Neighborhood Partnerships in 2013.

In the new letter, the group tells Obama:

RFRA was intended to provide protection for free exercise rights, applying strict scrutiny, on a case-by-case basis, to federal laws that substantially burden religious exercise. RFRA was not intended to create blanket exemptions to laws that protect against discrimination.

Yet, in contrast to this, the OLC Memo relies on flawed legal analysis and wrongly asserts that RFRA is "reasonably construed to require" a federal agency to categorically exempt a religiously affiliated organization from a grant program's explicit statutory non-discrimination provision, thus permitting the grantee to discriminate in hiring with taxpayer funds without regard to the government's compelling interest in prohibiting such discrimination.

In a 2011 analysis from the Federalist Society defending to OLC Memo, however, Derek Gaubatz wrote, "The outcome of this debate [over whether to keep or reverse the OLC Memo] will affect the ability of faith-based providers who engage in religious hiring preferences to compete with secular and other faith-based organizations for federal social service grants."

REQUEST FOR REVIEW AND RECONSIDERATION OF
JUNE 29, 2007 OFFICE OF LEGAL COUNSEL MEMORANDUM RE: RFRA

August 20, 2015

The Honorable Barack H. Obama
President of the United States
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, D.C. 20500

Dear Mr. President:

The 130 undersigned religious, education, civil rights, labor, LGBT, women's, and health organizations write to request that you direct the Attorney General to instruct the Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) to review and reconsider its flawed June 29, 2007 Memorandum titled, Re: Application of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act to the Award of a Grant Pursuant to the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act (OLC Memo). The OLC Memo reaches the erroneous and dangerous conclusion that the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993 (RFRA) provides a blanket override of a statutory non-discrimination provision. If left in place, the OLC Memo will tarnish the legacy of your work to advance fairness and equal treatment under the law for all Americans.

Some of us were members of the Coalition for the Free Exercise of Religion, which led the effort to persuade Congress to enact legislation after the United States Supreme Court sharply curtailed Free Exercise Clause protections in Employment Division v. Smith, 494 U.S. 872 (1990). This effort culminated in 1993, when then-President William J. Clinton signed RFRA into law.

RFRA was intended to provide protection for free exercise rights, applying strict scrutiny, on a case-by-case basis, to federal laws that substantially burden religious exercise. RFRA was not intended to create blanket exemptions to laws that protect against discrimination.

Yet, in contrast to this, the OLC Memo relies on flawed legal analysis and wrongly asserts that RFRA is "reasonably construed to require" a federal agency to categorically exempt a religiously affiliated organization from a grant program's explicit statutory non- discrimination provision, thus permitting the grantee to discriminate in hiring with taxpayer funds without regard to the government's compelling interest in prohibiting such discrimination.

The OLC Memo's broad and erroneous interpretation of RFRA has far-reaching consequences. For example, although the OLC Memo's conclusion is focused on one grantee in one Justice Department program, the Department has implemented it as a categorical exemption—that does not even require an individualized inquiry—to all religious hiring discrimination bans, most recently in the reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA). The Department of Labor has also cited the OLC Memo to adopt a categorical prohibition. Moreover, some have cited the OLC Memo in arguing that RFRA should broadly exempt religiously affiliated contractors from the nondiscrimination requirements in Executive Order 11246, including those you added just last year that bar government contractors from discriminating against LGBT workers. And, some are trying to extend its reach beyond the context of hiring: Several grantees and contractors have cited the OLC Memo to support their arguments that the government should create a blanket exemption that would allow them to refuse to provide services or referrals required under those funding agreements, specifically in the context of medical care for unaccompanied immigrant children who have suffered sexual abuse.

Throughout your presidency, you have committed to uphold this Nation's laws and values. Indeed, in March, when discussing the Indiana RFRA, your Press Secretary said discrimination is "not consistent with our values as a country that we hold dear." Even before you were elected President in 2008, you promised to end federally funded hiring discrimination, because of the government's profound and enduring commitment to upholding the civil rights principle that it must not fund discrimination. The deeply harmful OLC Memo severely undermines this commitment.

Contrary to the conclusion in the OLC Memo, RFRA is not a tool to categorically override statutory protections against religious hiring discrimination. Nor does it create an absolute free exercise right—without regard to countervailing compelling interests, as required by RFRA—to receive government grants without complying with applicable regulations that protect taxpayers and participants in federally funded programs.

We accordingly request that the OLC Memo be reviewed and its erroneous and dangerous interpretation of RFRA be reconsidered as soon as possible.

Thank you in advance for your consideration of our views.

9to5, National Association of Working Women
Advocates for Youth
African American Ministers In Action
AFSCME
AIDS United
AJC (American Jewish Committee)
American Association of University Women (AAUW)
American Atheists
American Baptist Home Mission Societies
American Civil Liberties Union
American Federation of Teachers
American Humanist Association
American Sexual Health Association
American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC)
Americans for Religious Liberty
Americans United for Separation of Church and State
Anti-Defamation League
Asian Americans Advancing Justice-AAJC
Association of University Centers on Disabilities (AUCD)
B'nai B'rith International
Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty
Bend the Arc Jewish Action
California Women's Law Center
Catholics for Choice
Center for Inquiry
Center for Reproductive Rights
CenterLink: The Community of LGBT Centers
Central Conference of American Rabbis
Clearinghouse on Women's Issues
Coalition of Labor Union Women
Concerned Clergy for Choice
The Council for Secular Humanism
DignityUSA
Disciples Justice Action Network
Equal Partners in Faith
Equality Federation
Family Equality Council
Feminist Majority Foundation
FORGE, Inc.
Forward Together
Freedom to Marry
Friends Committee on National Legislation
Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders (GLAD)
Gay and Lesbian Activists Alliance of Washington, D.C.
GLSEN
Hadassah, The Women's Zionist Organization of America, Inc.
Healthy Teen Network
Hindu American Foundation
Human Rights Campaign
Institute for Science and Human Values
Interfaith Alliance
Japanese American Citizens League
Jewish Council for Public Affairs
JWI
Keshet
Lambda Legal
Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law
The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights
League of United Latin American Citizens
Legal Momentum
Los Angeles LGBT Center
Many Voices: A Black Church Movement for Gay & Transgender (LGBT) Justice
Marriage Equality USA
MergerWatch
Methodist Federation for Social Action
Military Association of Atheists & Freethinkers
Movement Advancement Project
Muslim Advocates
Muslims for Progressive Values
NA'AMAT USA
NAACP
NARAL Pro-Choice America
National Abortion Federation
National Asian Pacific American Women's Forum
National Black Justice Coalition
National Center for Lesbian Rights
National Center for Transgender Equality
National Coalition Against Domestic Violence
National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs (NCAVP)
National Congress of Black Women
National Council of Jewish Women
The National Crittenton Foundation
National Education Association
National Employment Law Project
National Employment Lawyers Association
National Family Planning & Reproductive Health Association
National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health
National LGBTQ Task Force
National Network to End Domestic Violence
National Organization for Women
National Partnership for Women & Families
National Resource Center on Domestic Violence
National Women's Health Network
National Women's Law Center
Nehirim
People For the American Way
PFLAG National
Physicians for Reproductive Health
Planned Parenthood Federation of America
Political Research Associates
Population Connection Action Fund
Pride at Work
Pro-Choice Resources
The Rabbinical Assembly
The Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice
Religious Institute
Reproductive Health Technologies Project
Secular Coalition for America
Secular Policy Institute
Services and Advocacy for GLBT Elders (SAGE)
Sexuality Information and Education Council of the U.S. (SIECUS)
Sikh American Legal Defense and Education Fund (SALDEF)
The Sikh Coalition
Sikh Council on Religion and Education (SCORE)
South Asian Americans Leading Together (SAALT)
Southern Poverty Law Center
Texas Faith Network
Texas Freedom Network
Transgender Law Center
UltraViolet
Union for Reform Judaism
Unitarian Universalist Association
United Church of Christ Justice and Witness Ministries
United Methodist Church, General Board of Church and Society
UNITED SIKHS
URGE: Unite for Reproductive & Gender Equity
Women of Reform Judaism
Women's Alliance for Theology, Ethics, and Ritual (WATER)
Women's Law Project
YWCA USA


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Massachusetts Congressman On Clinton's Server: Double Standard Over "God Damn" Emails

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“I haven’t heard a word about Colin Powell. I haven’t heard a word about Condoleezza Rice.”

Win Mcnamee / Getty Images

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Rep. Stephen Lynch, a Massachusetts Democrat, on Thursday launched into a fiery defense of Hillary Clinton's exclusive use of private email during her tenure as secretary of state.

Clinton has faced intense scrutiny in recent weeks over whether classified information was found on her private email server . Last week, it was announced Clinton would turn over the server to the Justice Department for review.

Calling criticism of Clinton "bogus" and a double standard, Lynch said multiple Bush administration officials never produced "god damn" emails related to Iraq War.

"You know we've had several investigations on the committee regarding her emails and correspondence in the past going back to the Benghazi investigations and we've done a number of those in the oversight committee," Lynch stated on Boston Herald Radio. "You know number one now they're saying that that while she didn't send out any confidential information there might have been emails coming from elsewhere that weren't marked confidential, weren't marked classified, but after the fact now people are going back and they're going to label those as being classified without her knowing in advance. I mean that's bogus, that's bogus."

"I haven't heard a word about Colin Powell. I haven't heard a word about Condoleezza Rice," the Massachusetts congressman continued. "In our investigations we went to both those former secretaries of State and Colin Powell we tried to do an investigation regarding his decision, his testimony before the U.N. regarding weapons of mass destruction. You know what? Colin Powell didn't have a god damn email available for us. There was zero, zero."

Clinton, meanwhile, Lynch stated, turned over tens of thousands of emails from her time in office.

"Same thing with Condoleezza Rice, not a god damn email that was useful to the committee," he added. "And no one wants to talk about that because it's being run by a Republican chairman. So why is it ok that Colin Powell, you know, in a launching a war in Iraq to not have single available email it's ok for that, but Hillary Clinton, you know, she turns over 30,000 of them and you know that's not enough, we want more information. It's just a double standard. It's very glaring."

Lynch said Clinton was actually "the smartest one out of them all," citing recent government hacks.

"Her information is the only information that they haven't hacked," he stated. "So, you know, it's tough to argue that, you know, she should of put it on the government server would of been safe. Yeah well, I got about eight million people who, who are, you know, telling me something different right now because their information has all been hacked."


Ted Cruz: If Bernie Sanders Can't Stand Up To BLM, How Can He Stand Up To Putin?

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“If one is unable to stand up to a protester, it’s difficult to see how one can stand up to Putin or any other tyrant across the face of the globe.”

Charlie Leight / Getty Images

In a radio interview on the Michael Medved Show Wednesday, Republican presidential candidate Ted Cruz criticized Bernie Sanders, a Democratic presidential candidate, for turning over his podium to Black Lives Matter Activists during a campaign stop in Seattle.

"You know I have to say, watching Bernie Sanders quietly and meekly hand over the podium, was certainty not an exchange that engendered any confidence with this person as commander-in-chief," Cruz said. "If one is unable to stand up to a protester, it's difficult to see how one can stand up to Putin or any other tyrant across the face of the globe."

For Sanders, the protest was the second time that a campaign event of his was disrupted by the activists. The first occurred at the Netroots Nation gathering in Phoenix last month.

Here's the audio:

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Trump: "A Lot" Of "Gang Members" In Ferguson, Baltimore, Chicago Are "Illegal Immigrants"

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“We’re gonna get them out so fast, out of this country. So fast.”

Matthew Busch / Getty Images

Donald Trump says many of the "gang members" in Chicago, Ferguson, and Baltimore are undocumented immigrants.

"You know, a lot of the gangs that you see -- this doesn't hopefully pertain to you guys so much -- when you look at Baltimore, when you look at Chicago, and Ferguson a lot of these areas," Trump said on FM Talk 1065AM on Thursday. "You know, a lot of these gang members are illegal immigrants. They're gonna be gone. We're gonna get them out so fast, out of this country. So fast."

Trump was appearing to discuss his recent immigration plan ahead of an appearance Friday at Ladd Peebles Stadium, which has a maximum capacity of 50,000.

Take a listen to the audio:

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Activists Push Back On Hillary Clinton Comments About Border Children — With An O'Malley Assist

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Activists say Clinton opened up old wounds with comments about how to approach the Central American children who crossed the border last summer. But the O’Malley camp is also pushing advocates to scrutinize Clinton on the issue.

AP Images

Immigration advocates Thursday expressed dissatisfaction with remarks Hillary Clinton made this week that they say amount to doubling down on her stance last year that most of the Central American children who streamed across the border should be given as much love as possible but most should ultimately be sent back.

On Tuesday, Clinton said her past comments were the "responsible" message to send to families in Central America.

"Specifically with respect to children on the border, if you remember, we had an emergency, and it was very important to send a message to families in Central America: Do not let your children take this very dangerous journey because a lot of children did not make it," Clinton said.

The children were robbed, raped, kidnapped, and held for ransom by smugglers, she added.

But immigration activists, who have largely refrained from challenging Clinton after her well-received roundtable with DREAMers in Nevada in the spring, said Clinton doesn't quite understand the dynamics at play that led to the surge of unaccompanied minors.

Calling her comments "out of touch," Cristina Jimenez of United We Dream (UWD) told BuzzFeed News that families sent their children to the United States understanding the dangers of the journey and ultimately because the situation in their home country was so bad.

"It opens up old wounds," said Arturo Carmona, who leads the 300,000 member Presente. "Wounds that we thought were being healed by her statements in Nevada, which were more positive in our opinion, and sent a promising message that she was coming to her senses and knew she needed to have a much more Latino-friendly position on immigration."

Campaign officials said Clinton's comments Tuesday should be taken in the full context, pointing to remarks she made to Univision and Telemundo in August calling for an end to the detention of women and children and that the U.S. "should not send any child back to the kind of harm that could await them."

Clinton on Tuesday said the country needs more resources to process children already in the country, to listen to their stories to find out if they have family here, and whether they have a legitimate reason for staying.

There's an additional political dimension to this, too. Officials with Martin O'Malley's campaign have sought to promote his immigration plan and draw contrasts with Clinton. The campaign's director of public engagement, Gabriela Domenzain, has spoken with activists, trying to get them to scrutinize her campaign more closely on the immigration issue.

United We Dream said it did not speak with the O'Malley campaign before releasing a statement hitting Clinton on Thursday.

But a source later disputed this, saying the campaign did speak with UWD activists.

Domenzain said she has longstanding relationships with advocates, checking in with them often, and has not only been focused on Clinton, but more broadly has tried to bring more attention to the ongoing issue with children who are in family detention.

Asked about the O'Malley campaign's stance on the children who come from Central America, Domenzain said it's simple: "These are refugees and we should welcome them."

The former Maryland governor's campaign proudly notes that the state has the highest number of unaccompanied minors being cared for per capita.

It wasn't just activists firmly on the far left who felt Clinton's comments missed the mark, though.

"I didn't like that she was defending her original comments," said Frank Sharry, of America's Voice, a veteran activist who worked closely with the Obama administration during the lead up to the executive actions on immigration last year.

"I didn't get that part. But I did see her comments as saying we need to make sure we have the resources so people can make their case and if they deserve protection they get it. I didn't think she was saying lets send the kids home, but lets make sure they have their day in court. That moving forward we should review detention and give them resources — to help the kids — not resources for deportation."

Sharry noted that that immigration movement is big and broad and often disagrees on the best way to move issues forward.

"The house is on fire and Trump is about to burn it down, the focus should be on him," he said.

Activists framed their disappointment with Clinton as a response to the Republican candidates and the current climate about birthright citizenship, which some Republican candidates (led by Donald Trump) have endorsed revoking for the children of undocumented immigrants. Though the unaccompanied minors are a different issue, the activists argue the conversation demonstrates why Clinton should be as bold as possible on it.

Erika Andiola, a prominent activist who this year has worked with some of the children that came from Guatemala, said if Clinton wants to better understand the issue she should visit shelters and speak to them and called on her Latino advisers to help her.

Lorella Praeli, a former prominent activist with UWD, who now serves as the Clinton campaign's Latino outreach director said she has not heard these concerns.

"My door's always open," she said. "If you want to have a conversation on this, if you think there are things we should do, come and talk to us."

Online And In Person, Bernie Sanders’ White Supporters Advance A Black Lives Matter Conspiracy

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Scott Olson / Getty Images

At a recent Bernie Sanders event, Dave, a white fiftysomething in a Grateful Dead hat, offered an explanation for Black Lives Matter, the activist group that had interrupted Sanders just hours earlier in Seattle.

They weren’t activists. They were “agent provocateurs,” Dave said, sent by the Democratic establishment to quash the Vermont socialist’s message.

His mother, who was standing next to him across the temporary fence separating the press from the crowd at a large Sanders rally on the University of Washington campus, interrupted. “He’s a conspiracy theorist,” she said.

He’s not the only one. The conspiracy theories are hiding in plain sight at Sanders’ giant rallies. The crowds are mostly white and mostly frustrated by the confrontations with black activists some Sanders supporters say are doing nothing but tear down the only candidate who truly believes in the Black Lives Matter cause. But some of Sanders’ backers even take it a step further. Online and in person, this set of white Sanders fans wonder aloud if there’s some outside force causing the protest movement to target the senator.

The basic mythology is that someone — maybe frontrunner Hillary Clinton, maybe the Republicans, maybe her billionaire backers, maybe even the FBI — is using Black Lives Matter to tear Sanders down, to diminish an insurgent candidacy that, the supporters say, is viewed as a real threat by the establishment.

On a flight from San Francisco to Phoenix recently, for instance, a young, white, male Sanders supporter noticed the reporter sitting next to him was writing about Sanders and, unprompted, started talking about information dug up on Marissa Johnson, one of the young black women who took the stage at the Seattle Social Security event. He noted online sleuths on reddit had discovered the woman had posted about being an evangelical Christian and a Sarah Palin supporter on Facebook years earlier. Subterfuge, he said. She’s not the real deal. Something’s afoot.

Black activists like Johnson who have interrupted Sanders on stage have been doxxed, digitally harassed, and shouted at by Sanders backers, they say. Online there is the vibrant talk about who is really, secretly, responsible. The activists laugh off specific conspiracy charges but say that the continued incredulity from Sanders’ white supporters toward their cause prove their point that “white progressivism” isn’t interested in the issues Black Lives Matter is trying to bring to the fore. The lasting conspiracy narrative is all the proof they need, the activists say.

Hours after the first reports of the Seattle action — in which a small group of activists took over an event where Sanders was set to speak — the internet lit up with people claiming there was something amiss.

“I swear they were paid to do that,” one commenter wrote in the comments of an imgur post featuring a picture of the Seattle protesters.

“Clintons did it,” wrote another.

“It this a legitimate group? Have their official media accounts said anything concerning this? Could be paid subversion,” wrote another.

The doxxing began.

“Apparently one of the women, Marissa Johnson, was a Sarah Palin supporter some time back. You can probably draw your own conclusions…” wrote one.

It’s not everyone. On reddit, it’s easy to find hundreds of comments discussing how best to understand, respond to, or support the activists. And it’s hard to tell the allegiances of online conspiracy theorists — and impossible to underestimate the penchant for mischief online. But many of the comments were similar to those heard in person at Sanders events over the last month.

Other online chatter claimed the protesters were paid for by George Soros, the left-wing billionaire who has helped fund efforts supporting Clinton’s run for the White House. Some even suggested the FBI was involved.

Left out is much of the context. Sanders and Martin O'Malley (unlike Clinton) attended Netroots Nation in June, where both were shut down by protesters during a candidate forum — a moment that changed the Democratic landscape this summer, and particularly for Sanders.

Since then, the protesters shut down the Seattle event, the only stop on his recent West Coast tour that his campaign did not manage or coordinate. But Sanders has had plenty of events in other locations — from New Hampshire to Iowa to New Orleans — without interruption from activists who are part of the large, dispersed, and decentralized movement called Black Lives Matter. And unlike Clinton (who has also had her own somewhat contentious interaction with activists), Sanders often speaks at large, open rallies that are free from the Secret Service security requirements that accompany Clinton. In interviews and online, Black Lives Matter activists have said Clinton’s unique security cordon versus Sanders’ relatively wide-open access has a lot to do with why he’s been protested more than she has.

His campaign is extremely sensitive to the black protest movement. Campaign officials have made efforts to reach out to the activists, and altered the Sanders stump speech to ensure “Black Lives Matter” is said more than once each time Sanders speaks.

The Sanders campaign did not respond to two requests for comment on supporters and the conspiracy issue.

The ugliness began almost immediately after the Netroots action. While Sanders’ campaign attempted to mitigate the damage and reach out to the civil movement through listening sessions and meetings that go on to this day, many supporters were upset and began trashing the protest and doubting its legitimacy in online forums.

“It was definitely from a Sanders-supporting camp of people specifically treating the action as targeting Bernie Sanders, which it wasn’t, and specifically orchestrated by somebody else — as though we don’t have the autonomy,” Tia Oso, one of the protesters who interrupted the Netroots candidate forum, told BuzzFeed News Thursday. “Almost like Black Lives Matter is not a real movement.”

“It’s very insulting and completely tone deaf and really indicative of the level of vitriol and derision that very specific Bernie Sanders supporters are exhibiting and began to exhibit right away — which is 100% racist, it’s discriminatory, it’s very anti-black,” she said.

Oso said the Netroots action sprung up organically among people in attendance at the conference and would have occurred had Clinton chose to attend. Sanders wasn’t the target, and neither was the other man on stage, O’Malley. But many Sanders supporters in Phoenix felt their man had been unfairly targeted, Oso said. She was confronted in person at the conference, she said, and within a couple weeks the first conspiracists began to appear online.

“It’s odd that none of them have showed up to any of Hillary’s speeches,” wrote Bernie subreddit user LoveIsABernieThing in late July. “Something does seem very, very fishy.”

“Hillary wouldn’t be below paying them,” Margoer replied. “We know the history of mercenary protesters.”

A few days later, other Sanders supporters explained how Soros and Clinton could be behind the whole thing. “It’s not tinfoil,” one redditor wrote.

To Oso, the conspiracy claims belittle her movement and its supporters, suggesting white Sanders supporters aren’t as progressive as they make themselves out to be. Sanders and his campaign team, she said, have made genuine attempts to understand and advocate for Black Lives Matter after Netroots. Sanders’ grassroots army has not always followed suit.

“Some of the things that he’s said has still been a little bit tone deaf, but you know, nobody’s perfect,” she said. “Overall, his commitment to making a correction and listening and being receptive has been very genuine and you are seeing a responsiveness from him — as a campaign and as an individual.”

“His supporters, again, their attitude is still condescending, disrespectful, racist, anti-black. Some stuff is even sexist, it has a hint of misogyny to it,” she went on. “There’s a huge disconnect.”

Often mixed in with the online theories is racist, misogynistic, and other common and distasteful internet flotsam. It’s important to note: Online, it can’t really be determined whether that vitriol comes from true Sanders supporters.

When Sanders was interrupted at the Social Security rally in Seattle, though, there was plenty of ugliness. Microphones caught members of the audience yelling angrily as the two women took the stage. Protesters said they heard calls for police to use their tasers and calling for their arrest. The protesters allege a water bottle was thrown at them and they were told to “shut up” because “Bernie does so much for you.”

Online, a moderator on the SandersforPresident subreddit wrote, “Seriously. It really shouldn't have to be said, but the fact of the matter is: it doesn't matter if you disagree with the movement or the actions taken by those two women yesterday. Stop brigading other subreddits. Stop going to /r/BlackLivesMatters. Stop posting racist vitriol in /r/BlackLadies.”

On the BlackLivesMatter subreddit — which claims not to be directly connected with the movement’s leaders — moderate added a two-step barrier to entry to prevent what moderators wrote were “pitchforks and torches” from Sanders supporters.

The women who took the stage in Seattle, Johnson, and Mara Willaford, say they’re very aware many Sanders supporters think they were sent to harass Bernie by one of his opponents.

“My first response to this, was, ‘Bitch better have my money!’” Johnson joked, when asked about the conspiracy theories swirling that Clinton was behind the protests, to the hosts of the “This Week In Blackness” podcast the day after the Seattle action. “Yes, please, give me that money, I’ll expropriate those funds back to the ‘hood, let’s do it. Hillary, this is a call out: If Hillary wants to give me some money, please do.”

Johnson, the protester doxxed the most online, said her parents were “tea partiers.” She doesn’t share their politics, but she remains a “very devout, evangelical Christian.”

“I did run up there and confront Bernie Sanders because of my religious convictions. Are they right-wing religious convictions? No,” Johnson said of the accusation she is a conservative plant. “My religion says you lay down your life for other people. And so that’s why I do what I do.”

Willaford told the podcast’s hosts that the protesters — who were known in Seattle protest circles before the Sanders interruption, though other Black Lives Matter organizers in the city were not aware of the planned Sanders action — that she and Johnson were inundated with email after they interrupted Sanders, much of it nasty.

“The day of, we got emails that were like, ‘You should have been arrested, what you did was so rude and outrageous and undemocratic to take up space like that and you’re a bitch and a gorilla and whatever whatever,’” she said. “And then a couple of days later we would get an email, same person, being like, ‘So I read a couple of articles about the action and I thought about it and I was just really emotional when I sent that email I sent.’ We’ve got several emails from people apologizing for their very emotional, entitled-ass reactions to the action.”

She also heard a lot of the conspiracy talk from Sanders supporters.

“I’m really excited, you know, 50 years from now to read about this black femme power front within the FBI,” Willaford joked.

Oso, the activist who protested at Netroots, said the Black Lives Matter movement intends to stay a part of presidential politics for the foreseeable future. That means the potential for more actions, more protests and, Oso said, more chances for Sanders supporters to show where their blind spots are.

“To decide that not only is what we did is not valid, but it was actually orchestrated by a white person with money? As though Black Lives Matter is for sale, under the corporate control of somebody else?” she said. “That is disgusting and insulting. And this is why the Netroots action, I will stand behind it 100%. It revealed and is continuing to reveal so much about what’s wrong on the left.”

Darren Sands contributed reporting.

Fiorina Says Clinton Lying And Careless On Benghazi Security Requests

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“So again, it’s some combination of complete carelessness, saying to some underling ‘handle it,’ and prevarication.”

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Carly Fiorina says Hillary Clinton was some combination of lying and careless when, in her testimony about the attacks on Benghazi, Clinton claimed that she had nothing to do with documents bearing her signature that denied additional security to the consulate.

Fiorina claimed – in an attempt to draw a contrast between her and the former secretary of state -- that as an executive she used an "auto-pen" but she looked at all the documents.

"When the whole Benghazi scandal was swirling, she made the comment – and people discovered through FOIA – that she had signed the documents, turning down request for additional security," Fiorina said to radio host Hugh Hewitt.

"And those were presented to her, because she had said, 'Oh, I had nothing to do with that.' And they said, 'Well, look, these documents have your signature on them.' And her basic answer was, 'Well, that was an auto-pen. That was one of those things that just signs my signature for me.'"

Clinton testified before Congress that requests for additional security in Benghazi "did not come to my attention or above the assistant secretary level." Clinton's claim, as noted by Washington Post's fact-checker is backed by State Department's Accountability Review Board report on Benghazi. It is State Department protocol for all cables from Washington D.C. to have the secretary of state's signature on them.

The Post's fact-checker added "odds are extremely long that Clinton ever saw or approved this memo," rating the claims to the contrary a "whopper."

"Well, I can tell you as a chief executive who sometimes used auto-pen – I looked at every single document upon which the auto-pen would be used," Fiorina continued. "And the reason to use an auto-pen is because you're out of the country or out of town or something. But you look at it."

"So this reminds of that where somehow she's in charge, but she's not accountable for anything," Fiorina continued. "So again, it's some combination of complete carelessness, saying to some underling 'handle it,' and prevarication."

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