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Peter King: New Yorkers Voting For Cruz "Should Have Their Head Examined"

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“Look, I hope he gets the cold shoulder and other things from every New Yorker. Send him back where he belongs.”

Kevin Lamarque / Reuters

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Rep. Peter King of New York said in a radio interview on Thursday that New Yorkers should not vote for Ted Cruz in the state's upcoming primary.

"Let me say something about the New York primary: Any New Yorker who even thinks of voting for Ted Cruz should have their head examined," King said on the Joe Piscopo Show on AM 970 The Answer. "Really, here's a guy who refused to sign onto the 9/11 health care act for the cops and fireman. Here's a guy who talks about New York values."

"New York keeps going forward," King continued, citing the city's response to 9/11. "We're tough, and to have some guy like Ted Cruz with cowboy boots walk around criticizing us. Look, I hope he gets the cold shoulder and other things from every New Yorker. Send him back where he belongs. He's a phony, and that was all off the record by the way. I don't want anyone listening. That was all off the record."

"I just can't stand that guy," he added.

King, who previously backed Sen. Marco Rubio, said he would "wait and see" who to support in the primary, but said he didn't "have the hostility" towards Trump as he did towards Cruz. He said the ideal race would be between Trump and John Kasich.

"Cruz is a guy I really don't like and by the way, John Kasich is a really good guy," said King. "John Kasich is good guy."

"I would love to see Trump over Cruz here in New York," added King. "To me, the best debate is between Kasich and Trump. Not between Cruz with that smooth talking, how he loves everyone and is gonna wear the armor of God as he's into battle and all that. Come on. Give me a break."


Top Black And Latino Outreach Officials Leave DNC

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Gretchen Ertl / Reuters

WASHINGTON — In recent weeks, two key officials have left the Democratic National Committee: the organization’s top black and Hispanic outreach officials.

Ashanti F. Gholar and Albert Morales both resigned their posts as the black and Hispanic outreach leads for the DNC, respectively. Both had applied to be the DNC's national director of community engagement, according to five sources with knowledge of the process. Instead, the DNC filled the position from the outside, and Gholar and Morales are headed for new roles elsewhere.

The departures come at an inconvenient time — Hillary Clinton seems likely to soon secure the Democratic nomination, and the national convention is just months away. Three Democratic sources said the Clinton campaign, including senior staff, have expressed concerns with the depth and resources of the DNC’s Latino ground operation — and that was before Morales left.

“He was in a key position and it’s important that we be firing on all cylinders for November,” said one Clinton surrogate.

Still, the turnover is not unexpected at this point in the campaign. Operatives say Gholar’s and Morales’s exits are natural before the nominee comes in and brings in their own people.

Their roles are close to being filled; Davis is close to hiring away DeJuana Thompson from the Small Business Association to replace Gholar, according to a source with knowledge of the hire. Bridgette Gomez, an up-and-coming operative who served as the deputy field director for the Center for Community Change, will replace Morales, according to a source with knowledge of the hire.

In a statement to BuzzFeed News, a DNC spokesman downplayed the significance of the departures and emphasized a broader approach.

"Our political director, communications director, community engagement director, director of the chair’s office, director of party affairs, director of the secretary’s office, CEO of our convention, and many other critical positions at the DNC are filled by African-American and Latino professionals, so any talk of a departure of institutional knowledge of these communities is an outdated way of thinking that presumes a single point of contact is needed to check an imaginary box," the DNC's deputy communications director Mark Paustenbach said. "Our party reflects diversity across the board. It looks like America."

But the departures haven’t been received totally favorably. In her role as director of black outreach, Gholar worked with groups like NAACP, National Urban League, and the National Action Network, serving as the official liaison between the groups and the DNC. Her departure has angered many of the DNC's black caucus's 108 members, three sources said, because she had already begun planning the caucus's activity during the convention.

In previous hirings, black caucus and council chairs were provided an opportunity to give input and talk to some of the candidates, two sources said. This was not the case for Gholar’s replacement, those sources said, angering the black caucus.

“We did not have any input," on her replacement, said Virgie Rollins, chair of the DNC black caucus. "And we were not happy that she was leaving.”

"She was the best that the DNC could ever have," Rollins said. "You couldn't have have had a better person. It’s a real loss for the DNC that she is gone.”

“It was hard on folks,” a DNC aide said. "It’s the relationships she had."

“She was a genuine connector who understood the importance of not only building relationships with black Democrats in Washington, but black Democrats at every level,” a well-known party activist said.

Gholar has accepted a job as the political director of Emerge America, a Democratic women’s group.

"The DNC will always be my home, and the Democratic Party is a huge part of who I am," Gholar said in an email to BuzzFeed News. "However, so is Emerge America. I was a founding board member of Emerge Nevada and have stayed connected to the organization for many years. A lot of my work over the past year and a half at the DNC has focused on engaging and empowering women of color. When the opportunity came to serve as Emerge America’s first political director and help get more women, especially women of color, elected to office it was an opportunity I couldn’t pass up.”

The DNC pointed to its Univision debate in Miami last month as evidence that it is engaging Hispanic voters where they are and said those black and Latino efforts are buoyed by increased funding to state parties by 50% over its previous baseline.

Still, Democrats say the DNC was already being roundly outspent by the RNC, which has staffers on the ground in key states for Hispanic outreach, but Morales was able to leverage his relationships with Latino leaders and experience from multiple DNC tours to try to compete.

Responding to the departures of Gholar and Morales, a DNC official said politics is a fluid business and both will remain valuable allies for the DNC in their new positions.

Morales, who joined the U.S. Hispanic Chamber of Commerce as vice president of government affairs and policy, was an experienced operative who understood the nuance of engaging different Hispanic communities, Latino Democrats say, and was cognizant of the power and influence evangelical churches can have.

A result of his work: a database of 6,000 Hispanic elected officials — both Democrats and Republicans — and when they’re next up for re-election, for use by the eventual nominee.

But the Mexican-American Morales also knew the limitations of being a one-man Hispanic engagement machine, said Democratic strategist Jose Parra, who served as a senior advisor to Harry Reid, pointing again to the diversity within the community.

“I cannot be expected to walk into South Florida and stump for the party with my Tejano boots and my big belt buckle,” he recalled Morales saying.

“This is something that whoever the nominee is is going to have to place a premium on replacing these two operatives,” said Democratic strategist Andres Ramirez, a superdelegate supporting Clinton. “This creates a deficit of two very good organizers in minority communities.”

A Clinton surrogate said Democrats would be making a mistake by treating 2016 as a normal election, and not having the party apparatus primed to take advantage of “an opportunity to have historic Hispanic turnout that far exceeds any election before, because of how nasty the Republicans have gotten.”

In a short interview, Morales declined to get into the specifics of his time at the DNC and made it clear his new role was something he was excited about. Instead, he shared a story of being 19 when his boss’s chief of staff told him that the minute he started putting his personal interests ahead of the boss would be the day he needed to walk away from politics.

“I wish more young people heeded this advice today,” he said.

And he made clear that his departure wasn’t personal.

“At the end of the day, Will Rogers’ quote still holds true,” he said. “I am not a member of any organized political party. I am a Democrat.”

Sen. Mike Lee: "I'd Be Surprised" If Cruz Didn't Win A Contested Convention

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“We have to remember that most Republicans around the country have voted for someone other than Donald Trump.”

Jim Urquhart / Reuters

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Utah Sen. Mike Lee, a backer of Ted Cruz, says he believes the Texas senator is likely to be the nominee if the Republican convention is contested.

"Well look, merely leading in delegates isn't enough to get the nomination, that's why we have the convention, that's why we have delegates from all over the country," the Lee said on WBAL 1090 on Wednesday. "And even though it hasn't happened in a while, it's been 40 years since the last contested convention, it does happen sometimes, and when it does happen, it is not dispositive that one person has a few more delegates than someone else."

"The only thing that is dispositive is whether someone has a more majority of the delegates," he continued. "If you can get to 1237 votes prior to convention, then you've got it locked up. If you can't, then the odds are pretty good that you're gonna have a contested convention and you're gonna have multiple ballots."

Lee said a multiple ballot convention clearly favored Cruz.

"On successive ballots, I think the victory is more likely to go to Ted Cruz. We have to remember that most Republicans around the country have voted for someone other than Donald Trump," Lee said. "I would not be a bit surprised if Ted Cruz won in that circumstance, in fact I'd be surprised if he didn't. On second ballots, or successive ballots, you're gonna see more and more delegates moving to Ted Cruz."

Sen. Kelly Ayotte Says She'll Back Trump If He's The Republican Nominee

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“I plan to support our Republican nominee,” Ayotte said.

Brian Snyder / Reuters

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New Hampshire Republican Sen. Kelly Ayotte, who is facing a tough re-election battle this year, said she'll back Donald Trump if he wings the Republican nomination.

"Listen, I think, what I've said is, at this point I plan to support our Republican nominee," Ayotte told New Hampshire local radio's Dan Mitchell on Thursday morning. "That said, I got to tell you, I don't know who that's gonna be. I think that this is far from over. This process still has to play out and you know, I want to see what happens at this convention, obviously."

Asked again, if Trump emerged as the nominee if she'd support him, Ayotte said, "I plan to support our Republican nominee."

Trump won the New Hampshire Republican primary by a large margin in February.

Bill Clinton Clashes With Protesters Over "Superpredators"

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“You are defending the people who killed the lives you say matter,” Clinton said. “You are defending the people who caused young people to go out and take guns.”

In a rally for Hillary Clinton Thursday, Bill Clinton told Black Lives Matter protesters who spoke up during his speech that they were "defending the people who kill the lives you say matter."

In a rally for Hillary Clinton Thursday, Bill Clinton told Black Lives Matter protesters who spoke up during his speech that they were "defending the people who kill the lives you say matter."

ABC News / Via youtube.com

Bill Clinton was in the midst of talking about Hillary Clinton's prison reform policies in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, when a protester began yelling.

The words weren't clearly audible in recordings — it sounded like one person said "black youth are not superpredators" — and two people can be seen in the front of the rally holding signs reading "Welfare reform increased poverty," and, "Clinton crime bill destroyed our community," and another reading "Hillary Clinton is a murderer."

"Here's the thing. I like protesters, but the ones that won't let you answer are afraid of the truth," Clinton said, directly addressing the protesters. "You never learn anything while you're talking."

youtube.com

One protester made reference to Hillary Clinton using the term "superpredators" in 1994 to describe a "new class" of young black criminals who "lacked all conscience and empathy." Hillary Clinton apologized for using this term in February.

Bill Clinton on Thursday said his wife understood of how much "black lives matter."

"Hillary spent her time trying to get healthcare for poor kids—and who were they?" The former president said. "Their lives matter."

When the protester continued, Clinton said, "I don't know how you would characterize the gang leaders who got 13-year-old kids hopped up on crack and sent them out into the street to murder other African American children," he said as the crowd tried to drown out the protesters with cheers.

"Maybe you thought they were good citizens—she didn't," he added. "You are defending the people who killed the lives you say matter. Tell the truth."

"You are defending the people who caused young people to go out and take guns," he continued.


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RNC Chair: GOP Race Is "History That Will Be Talked About Forever"

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“You know, it’s an incredible job.”

Jonathan Ernst / Reuters

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Republican National Committee chairman Reince Priebus said during a radio interview on Thursday that his job is "incredible," adding that he is at the center of history that will be talked about forever.

Priebus acknowledged in the lengthy interview with former Massachusetts Sen. Scott Brown on WMEX 1510 that there is a possibility of a contested convention in July if no candidate reaches the delegate threshold.

"People are gonna write books, history books about what's going on," said Brown, noting he thought Priebus' job was tough.

"Well, I haven't started pouring Bailey's in my cereal yet, but, I've certainly considered it," joked Priebus. "No, people assume that I'm, people tell me, 'oh, you've got the worst job in the world.' You know, it's an incredible job. It's an incredible opportunity, and it's unbelievable to be in the middle of history that will be talked about forever."

Priebus said he sees it as his job to educate voters on the process of a contested convention.

Donald Trump Mocks Hillary Clinton's Subway Ride: "Sad!"

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“Well, just seeing her do that, just for a picture, just for a photo op is uh, sad, actually.”

Brendan McDermid / Reuters

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Donald Trump criticized Hillary Clinton on Thursday for her photo op on the New York City subway, calling it "pandering" and "sad."

In an interview with former Sen. Scott Brown on the The Michele McPhee Show, Trump said, "It's so bad, it's so bad."

"When you think, is it not just horrible? I just, I can't even conceive of the whole thing," Trump continued, "and she's never been, she hasn't been on the subway in 20 years, if she was ever in the subway and it's so bad. The picture of her riding around for — it's called pandering it's so bad. Too bad."

"I was on the subway last week going down to Chinatown," Brown interjected.

"Well, just seeing her do that, just for a picture, just for a photo op is uh, sad, actually. If you want to know the truth," Trump said.

Ben Carson: Trump Knows That His Twitter Use Is A Problem

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“We talk about it and a number of people have talked about it, including his family. And he knows that it’s a problem. And the first part of solving the problem is recognizing that it exists.”

Carlo Allegri / Reuters

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Ben Carson said on Thursday that a number of people have talked to Donald Trump about his Twitter use and that the Republican frontrunner knows that it is a problem.

Carson made the comments in an interview with Florida radio host Joyce Kaufman. Referring to Trump's Twitter account, the host told Trump's former rival and current surrogate, "I hope that somebody closes that Twitter account, really."

"Well, I think he will come to understand," Carson said. "We talk about it, and a number of people have talked about it, including his family. And he knows that it's a problem. And the first part of solving the problem is recognizing that it exists."

Carson, who has made a number of eyebrow-raising comments since endorsing Trump, also said in the interview that a number of people were working to help Trump avoid becoming distracted by what he described as a hostile media.

"I think a number of us are working on that particular problem, because the liberal media in particular just knows that whenever he starts getting some moment, all we have to do is say something about him and going off and then we can get him distracted again," Carson said. "And if they feel that they have that as their ace in the hole, it's going to give them a lot of control and we don't want them to have that."


Scott Walker: Cruz Will Win Nomination At Convention On Second Ballot

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The Wisconsin governor said it was likely that the nominee would be chosen at the convention.

Kamil Krzaczynski / Reuters

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Scott Walker said on Thursday that it was likely the Republican primary would be decided at the convention in July, predicting a Ted Cruz victory on the second ballot.

"I think it is very, very likely now that it will be at the convention," Walker, who has endorsed Cruz, told Wisconsin radio host Jerry Bader. "But it won't be the wild wild West that some in the media are portraying it as. I think what happens is nobody has 1,237 on the first ballot. I think by the second ballot, depends on the state, Wisconsin delegates are bound far into the process, so you're not gonna see people change, which is good because almost all the delegates are with Ted Cruz."

The Wisconsin governor said that he thought Marco Rubio's delegates in particular would shift to Cruz.

"But many, many other states are freed up after that first vote, and so I think you're gonna see a shift particularly from delegates who are assigned to Marco Rubio," Walker said. "I firmly believe that the over, over-whelming majority of those delegates on the subsequent ballots will go to Ted Cruz. So I think he will get past 1237 by the second ballot, which is good because he'll unite the party, bring us together."

Walker said he doesn't believe deciding the nominee at the convention would result in chaos.

"And for those in the media who say this is some sort of chaotic event, I would remind them that Abraham Lincoln was elected in an open convention, on I think it was either the fifth or sixth ballot if I remember right," he said. "And so, we did pretty well with our first Republican president. I think we're gonna be just fine with Ted Cruz winning on the second or subsequent ballot."

After Clash With Black Lives Matter, N.Y. Activists Question Bill Clinton's Apology

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Mike Segar / Reuters

WASHINGTON — Racial justice and Black Lives Matter activists based in New York say they question the sincerity of Bill Clinton's statement at the NAACP last summer that the longer sentences in the 1994 crime bill were "overdone" after he clashed with BLM protesters earlier this week.

On Thursday, after protesters interrupted Bill Clinton's remarks at a rally in Philadelphia, the former president criticized the demonstrators and defended his wife's use of a controversial term — "superpredators" — in 1996 that has been the source of protests in recent months.

“I don’t know how you would characterize the gang leaders who got 13-year-old kids hopped up on crack and sent them out into the street to murder other African-American children,” Bill Clinton told the protesters.

“Maybe you thought they were good citizens—she didn’t,” he added. “You are defending the people who killed the lives you say matter. Tell the truth.”

On Friday, BuzzFeed News contacted a dozen activists based in New York, which will hold a primary on April 19. The activists said they now question the calculus behind Bill Clinton's speech last summer, in which he said his administration was wrong for signing a bill that required longer sentences for many low-level criminals that did not justify their crimes. (“I signed a bill that made the problem worse. And I want to admit it," he said then.)

Bill Clinton, they said, seemed to justify his wife's 1996 usage of the term "superpredator" with the same rationale widely debunked by criminologists — a term she has apologized for and distanced herself from.

Tamika Mallory, a prominent activist and member of the board of directors of Justice League NYC, said the former president's views are out of touch.

"Bill Clinton's comments beg the question whether his apology — about how his policies as president negatively impacted the black community — was genuine or a campaign strategy to make Americans move past the devastation his administration caused," she said. "What we saw yesterday is a person who is very much out of touch and I believe his true colors have once again appeared."

Stanley Talbert, a racial justice advocate and minister said that while there is a "legitimate need" to deal with all crime, Bill Clinton, in his comments had continued "to criminalize blackness by laying the onus of crimes against black people by black people, and making protestors accessories to the crime."

"It is difficult to accept an apology from the Clintons in relation to characterization of young black criminals as 'superpredators', when Bill Clinton continues to criminalize black lives," Talbert said. "They may have apologized for their language, but they are still operating under the same ideology that has disproportionately criminalized black people in the U.S."

Bill Clinton's remarks yesterday weren't of any surprise to BLM, an organizer of the New York City BLM chapter said.

"If you follow the historical commentary — especially when defending his wife's campaign — along with the policies from his presidency, you'll see that those two things have often targeted our communities in a way that shuts us out," BLMNY organizer Kei Williams said.

Williams called Bill Clinton's rhetoric and that of the candidate's as one and the same. "Again this furthers why we will not endorse a presidential candidate," Williams said.

Rosa Clemente, a lecturer and Black Lives Matter organizer based in Albany said that Hillary Clinton did not deserve one "black, brown, or working class vote in New York."

She said she predicted that her campaign would distance herself from her husband's comments. Clemente, however, said that as an adviser to her husband's administration, Hillary Clinton was an accessory to the policies undertaken in the '90s.

"That's why I encourage anybody any progressive, leftist, or working class people that thinks to push the button to vote for the Green Party candidate or Bernie Sanders," she said.

Bill Clinton expanded on the comments on Friday, saying he wanted to turn it into a teachable moment.

"So I did something yesterday in Philadelphia. I almost want to apologize for it, but I want to use it as an example of the danger threatening our country," Bill Clinton said, according to MSNBC. "I rather vigorously defended my wife, as I am wont to do, and I realized, finally, I was talking past [the protester] the way she was talking past me. We gotta stop that in this country. We gotta listen to each other again."

Rosa Clemente, a Black Lives Matter organizer based in Albany, said she was speaking in Philadelphia on Friday about what she called Bill Clinton's anti-blackness.

"He's unconscionable," Clemente said. "His response to Black Lives Matter, for him to talk about what he thinks black-on-black crime is, when his policies exacted destruction on our community influence on mass incarceration and welfare reform destroyed the safety net for families and put a harsh burden on black and brown families."

"Now," she said, "he wants castigate and be condescending to a movement that is dealing with systemic white supremacy in this county and they don't like it. Black and brown people need to be very clear when they step into that voting booth. It's a wrap."

"A lot of were really appalled and yet, not really that surprised," said Zellie Imani, a BLM organizer and educator who participated in a meeting Hillary Clinton had with members of Campaign Zero in Washington last October.

Imani said the Philadelphia marked a much different tone from Bill Clinton's address at the NAACP last summer.

"We've been witnessing this switch of rhetoric from the Clintons depending on who the audience is," he said.

On the crime bill, Imani said Hillary Clinton emphasized that black groups had endorsed the bill, too. "It was like she was saying, 'Don't just blame me,'" he said, adding that he and others have no reason to believe the Clintons have a difference of opinion.

"For me, as well as others, it just shows that the Democratic Party really doesn't understand the aims and purpose of the Black Lives Matter movement," he said. "Right there, in Philadelphia, not really a year later, he showed his apology was just a damage control strategy to try and retain black support."

Ben Carson: Donald Trump Should Read The Bible And Pray

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Carson also said it would be “very, very difficult” for Trump to get enough delegates to clinch the nomination before the convention.

Alex Wong / Getty Images

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Dr. Ben Carson, who is a surrogate for Donald Trump's presidential campaign, said in a radio interview on Friday that he would advise the Republican frontrunner to read the bible and conceded that it would be difficult for Trump to get enough delegates to clinch the nomination before the convention.

Carson told WABC's Rita Cosby that Trump realizes he needs to change his personality to win.

"For him, it's a matter of just switching over to his normal persona as opposed to the Apprentice persona," Carson said. Carson added that Trump would be doing policy speeches to help with this.

The neurosurgeon and former presidential candidate said he would advise Trump to pray and read the bible, saying he "certainly hopes" Trump will be more humble.

"I would say read the Bible and pray," Carson said. "And learn how to put yourself in other people's shoes, that's what did it for me."

Carson added that he believed it would be hard for Trump to get the number of delegates to clinch the nomination before the convention.

"I think everybody recognizes that it is going to be very, very difficult, but it's still possible," he said. "And I think a little bit of tacking more toward the compassionate side as opposed to the tough side would help quite a bit."

Justice Sotomayor Thinks The Supreme Court Needs To Be More Diverse

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U.S. Supreme Court justices Elena Kagan, Sonia Sotomayor and Ruth Bader Ginsburg in March 2015.

Allison Shelley / Getty Images

As the White House and Congress battle over the nomination of Judge Merrick Garland to the Supreme Court, one of the current justices said Friday the country's top court needs more diversity.

Speaking to Brooklyn Law School students, Justice Sonia Sotomayor said the court's current composition could do with some tweaking.

“I for one, do think there’s a disadvantage from having six Catholics, or five Catholics now, I’m sorry, and three Jews on the court,” she said according to reporters at the event. “Everyone from an Ivy League school. And virtually everyone…from New York.

"There is no criminal defense lawyer on the court," she added.

Judge Garland's name was not mentioned at the event, according to the Wall Street Journal, but the first Hispanic Supreme Court justice said having different backgrounds helped the justices "educate each other to be better listeners and better thinkers because we understand things from experience."

"A different perspective can permit you to more fully understand the arguments that are before you and help you articulate your position in a way that everyone will understand," she said, according to the Associated Press.

All current eight members of the court studied at either Harvard, Yale, or Colombia universities. Four members were born in New York, while two were born in California. Merrick Garland, also a Harvard graduate, is Jewish and hails from Illinois.

At a University of Chicago Law School event on Thursday, President Obama acknowledged he had received criticism for nominating "a white guy" to the court.

Kevin Lamarque / Reuters

“The way I thought about diversity is not to think about any single seat as, ‘Oh, I’ve got to fill this slot with this demographic,’" Obama said, "but rather, ‘If I’ve got a broad set of nominees to make...how do I make sure that I’m intentional throughout that process, so that the talent of every American and every potential candidate gets a fair look?’”

“At no point did I say, ‘Oh, you know what? You know, I need a black lesbian, you know, from Skokie, in that slot. Can you find me one?’”

“It turns out that if the process is fair and you are saying that it’s important that our courts are reflective of a changing society, you’ll end up with a really good cross-section of people who are excellent and that’s who we’ve been able to appoint," the president said.

Donald Trump's Greatest Enemy Is Still Rosie O'Donnell, As This Song Proves

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Trump’s greatest nemesis is back with a vengeance.

You might think Ted Cruz, or even Hillary Clinton, is Donald Trump's number one enemy right now, but you'd be wrong. There's one person he hates above all others...

You might think Ted Cruz, or even Hillary Clinton, is Donald Trump's number one enemy right now, but you'd be wrong. There's one person he hates above all others...

David Becker / Getty Images

That's right: ROSIE O'DONNELL.

That's right: ROSIE O'DONNELL.

Charles Sykes / AP

As CNN reported in this super helpful explainer, it all began back in 2006 when O'Donnell, then a co-host on The View, criticized Trump's decision not to fire his Miss USA pageant winner over revelations of underage drinking and drug use. She called him a "snake-oil salesman." 🔥🔥🔥

In response after response, Trump then called O'Donnell a "real loser" and repeatedly made fun of her appearance. In one instance, he even joked about her battling depression.

"If I looked like Rosie, I'd struggle with depression too," Trump told Entertainment Tonight.

Over the years, the pair continued to spar on Twitter, then during a Republican presidential debate in August Trump mocked her again.

When asked by Fox News' Megyn Kelly why he had previously used words like "fat pigs," "dogs," "slobs," and "disgusting animals" to describe women, Trump joked he'd only used those terms to describe O'Donnell.

She...was not pleased.


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Changes For Clinton Digital Operation — Including Clinton Family's Social Media

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Lucas Jackson / Reuters

The Clinton campaign quietly shuffled top aides in charge of running the Democratic candidate’s digital operation recently, a move that a source familiar told BuzzFeed News will focus on boosting Hillary Clinton’s social persona.

Katie Dowd, a longtime digital-focused aide to Clinton has shifted from her job as digital director into a new senior adviser role. Jenna Lowenstein, former vice president of digital at the Clinton-aligned EMILY’s List, has moved from Dowd’s deputy to a new job as the Clinton campaign’s full-time director of digital.

Dowd will focus in a concerted way on building the social media presence for Hillary, Bill, and Chelsea Clinton, as well as top campaign surrogates, sources familiar with the change told BuzzFeed News.

A Clinton campaign aide also said Saturday that Lori Lodes would be joining the campaign as the communications department chief of staff. The aide characterized the changes as expanding the campaign's capacity ahead of the final Democratic primaries.

The change comes at a time when digital campaign has become completely dominated by social. The public-facing online personae of candidates have played the highest-profile role yet in 2016 — a year dominated by Donald Trump. The Republican frontrunner’s tweets, written himself, create and dominate news cycles.

Clinton’s digital operation is generally not seen as among the best this cycle; Bernie Sanders has had better success with online fundraising and viral engagement than Clinton, though a fair share of Sanders’ success has also originated outside the campaign.

John Catsimatidis Apologizes To Trump For Saying Donors Are Scared Of Him

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“Ok, good, I take your disavowal,” Trump responded.

Brendan McDermid / Reuters

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Grocery store tycoon John Catsimatidis emphatically apologized to Donald Trump on his Sunday radio show for telling the New York Times that political donors in New York were taking a second look at Ted Cruz out of fear of the Republican frontrunner.

"Lots of people are giving him a second look," Catsimatidis told the Times. "People are scared of Donald Trump, that's why."

On his Cats Roundtable show, Catsimatidis apologized to Trump for the quote and denied ever saying it.

"Donald, I must apologize on one item, a couple of days ago in New York Times, it said that people were looking at Ted Cruz because they were scared of you. I never said that. I disavow saying that. We know each other for 30 years, I would never say that," Catsimatidis said at the beginning of his interview.

"That's good, because you were quoted in the Times and I was surprised to see it, and you're disavowing that quote and that's fine with me," responded Trump. "I believe that."

"I have never, you know, me and you know that for 30 years and we know each other," replied Catsimatidis.

"Ok, good, I take your disavowal," Trump said.


Sen. Cory Gardner: Trump Has "Diminishing Future," Will Keep Losing Delegates

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“I think what we’ve seen in Wisconsin, what we are going to see going forward is, I think, more and more people realize that Donald Trump is not their choice to carry the Republican values forward, and that’s why he’s going to continue to lose delegates.”

Rick Wilking / Reuters

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Republican Sen. Cory Gardner says Donald Trump has a "diminishing future" after his loss to Ted Cruz in Wisconsin's primary last week.

The Colorado senator was asked on the Kelley and Kafer show Friday about Trump's former adviser, Roger Stone, threatening to publicize the hotel rooms of Republican convention delegates who don't support Trump.

"It sounds like to me like a consultant, a political consultant who has a candidate that is kind of wits end because they see a diminishing future, and I think you can see that turning point in Wisconsin as somebody else has caught momentum," Gardner said. "Ted Cruz caught the momentum in Wisconsin that I think that Donald Trump thought was his and his alone. I detect quite a bit of panic in the voice and the comments made by Roger Stone."

Gardner said Trump's recent losses were not the result of some conspiracy, but rather voters were turning against him.

"I think what we've seen in Wisconsin, what we are going to see going forward is, I think, more and more people realize that Donald Trump is not their choice to carry the Republican values forward, and that's why he's going to continue to lose delegates," Gardner said. "He's going to continue to lose delegates in Colorado. It has nothing to do with somebody's conspiracy over who's meeting with whom, and it has everything to do with the messages and the principles of the candidate."

It Finally Happened: Hacky Sackers Caught Hacking At Bernie Sanders Rally

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Bernie Sanders took a swing through upstate New York Monday to stump for votes ahead of April 19's primary in the Empire State. He drew huge crowds at a stop in Binghamton and Albany. Other scheduled stops on the tour included Rochester, Buffalo, and Syracuse.

Sanders rallies can be like the stereotypes fashioned by critics — although not always. Mostly white, mostly young, mostly liberal crowds do meet the Vermont senator at many of his campaign stop. But the crowds are more politically savvy, wonkier, and less overall jam-band audience-esque than most of the haters think when they snark about Sanders and his supporters.

But sometimes, the reality meets with the cliche. And that's what happened in the crowd in Albany.

Ben Carson: I'd Be Never Trump Too If Election Stakes Weren't So High

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“For me, it’s about the children and the grandchildren.”

Mike Stone / Reuters

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Ben Carson said in a radio interview last week that his support for Donald Trump is purely pragmatic, adding that he wouldn't support Trump if the stakes in the election were not so high.

"It was pragmatism, recognizing that John Kasich cannot win without a brokered convention — which would guarantee a Democrat win — and recognizing that Ted Cruz can bring conservatives but will have a very difficult time bringing moderates and Democrats," Carson said on Kelley and Kafer. "I think that will be pretty much a guaranteed loss also. So in terms of who can potentially win, I think that would be Donald Trump. When I look at the consequences of not winning, it's too horrible to even think about."

Later, Carson told host Krista Kafer, who said she will not support Trump if he's the nominee, that he would share her view if the stakes of the election for future generations weren't so high.

"For me, it's about the children and the grandchildren," said Carson. "If it was just me, I would be completely where Krista is. I would say, 'hey, I got this,I can deal with it,' but for them, I can't."

Earlier, when Kafer said Trump was a bad man, Carson said we all are.

"Who isn't? Who among us isn't?" asked Carson.

Ted Cruz: "The Drudge Report Has Become The Attack Site For The Trump Campaign"

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“By all appearances, Roger Stone now decides what’s on Drudge.”

Carlo Allegri / Reuters

Ted Cruz says the Drudge Report has become propaganda for Donald Trump's campaign.

"Drudge Report over the years has done a good job highlighting the excesses of the left and the excesses of liberalism, and about the past month the Drudge Report has basically become the attack site for the Donald Trump campaign," Cruz said on the Mike Slater Show on Monday. "And so every day they have the latest Trump attack, they're directed at me. By all appearances, Roger Stone now decides what's on Drudge. And most days, they have six-month-old article that is some attack on me and it's whatever the Trump campaign is pushing that day will be the banner headline on Drudge."

Cruz said Drudge doesn't put election results on his site anymore now that he has started to win primaries and caucuses.

"When we win the state, suddenly the state doesn't matter," Cruz said. "There was no red siren on Drudge when we won all 34 delegates in Colorado. That wasn't news."

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Clinton Camp Celebrates One-Year Anniversary

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Hillary Clinton at the first event of her campaign on April 14, 2015, in Monticello, Iowa.

Charlie Neibergall / AP


On April 12, 2015, one year ago on this day, a massive political machine known as “Hillary for America” first came clanking and grinding into the public world, unveiling an infrastructure of political strategists and consultants, field offices and digital properties — all underpinning an effort to make Hillary Clinton president.

The question on that Sunday afternoon as the candidate left home in Chappaqua, N.Y., heading West for her first event in Iowa, was whether the voters would follow.

One year later, on the anniversary of the launch, Clinton is celebrating the millions of supporters who made a powerhouse campaign into what her aides argue is a grassroots coalition. To mark the occasion on Tuesday, officials built “Our Year On The Trail,” a website geared to show Clinton’s voters they are part of something big.

Using interactive tools, the page documents the campaign’s development over the last year. One function allows users to find out how many contributors share their first name (“276 other Hillarys have joined this campaign, too!”), zip code (13,689 from Chappaqua), and astrological sign (26,909 Scorpios; “She’s a Scorpio, too!”). In another tool, a map plots donations and volunteers over the last 12 months, timed to an icon of Clinton’s face bopping from state to state, tracing her travels.

("Mary" was the most common name for a Clinton donor this year, per the site. And her Virgo and Leo supporters far outnumber those who align with the other 10 astrological signs: more than 45,000 Virgos and 43,000 Leos signed on.)

The site ends with a brief thank you from the candidate to her supporters, signed with a hand-written “Hillary”: “I’m grateful for all you’ve done… When the road ahead is tough, you need the best people by your side. That’s why I’m thankful for you.”

Via hillaryclinton.com


Since last April, Clinton and her aides have sought to dispel the notion that her supporters lack enthusiasm, particularly from young people amid the rise of Bernie Sanders. Although he commands much of that voting bloc and a small-donor army that has delivered a steady stream of millions of dollars, Clinton has seen a strong coalition of support throughout the primary. Last month, a Gallup survey showed Clinton backers are "more enthusiastic" than Sanders', 54% to 44%.

Officials often note that Clinton has received more votes this year than any candidate in either party. Aides have also looked to highlight the attention paid to building out a small-donor and volunteer operation across the country. A year into the campaign, according to the anniversary website, Clinton claims more than half a million volunteers. (“Volunteers spent 145,195 hours talking to voters.”) The site also highlights more than 1 million donors — from “all walks of life.” (See: 21,894 teachers, 11,668 nurses, 2,051 librarians, 502 electricians, 167 bakers, 15 butchers, “and even 6 candlestick makers.”)

Clinton will spend her campaign’s one-year mark at a roundtable discussion in New York before attending fundraising events in Florida, and will not make much of the anniversary itself at her events, an aide said. (Aside from the website, the public birthday programming appears to be a series of two dozen “One Year Anniversary Phone Banks” organized across Pennsylvania, which votes on April 26.)

In a statement provided by an official, the candidate touted the “broad, diverse coalition of voters and grassroots supporters" behind her campaign.

“They’re knocking on doors, making phone calls, and donating however much they can so we can build on the progress President Obama has made and fight against the dangerous, divisive rhetoric of the Republicans," Clinton said.


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