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Unlike Donald Trump, Ted Cruz Says He Has Changed Diapers

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“It’s a parent’s job.”

Aaron Bernstein / Reuters

w.soundcloud.com

Ted Cruz says changing a baby's diaper is not just a wife's job, as Donald Trump asserts, but a job for both parents.

"It's a parent's job," Cruz told Glenn Beck on his radio program. "I can tell you with our girls I changed a lot of diapers, Heidi changed a lot of diapers. When a diaper needs changing whoever's closest jumps on the grenade so to speak."

BuzzFeed News on Sunday published a series of old interviews Trump gave to the Howard Stern Show and Opie and Anthony programs in which he revealed his thoughts on parenting.

Trump said in one interview that men who change diapers and care for the child are acting "like the wife," adding that he wouldn't have kids with a woman who demanded he take part in those responsibilities.


Bush, Rubio Donors Didn't Rush To Support Ted Cruz In March

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Joe Raedle / Getty Images

Establishment Republican donors were reluctant to back Sen. Ted Cruz even as he emerged as the top alternative to Donald Trump after key primary wins last month — with just about as many moving to John Kasich, whose path to the nomination is much dicier.

Approximately 63 of Bush’s campaign committee donors gave to Cruz after the former Florida governor dropped out of the race on Feb. 20, according to a BuzzFeed News analysis of the latest Federal Election Commission reports. Contributions from those donors amounted to just under $100,000 for the Cruz campaign.

And about 120 former Marco Rubio donors contributed a total of $126,650 to Cruz after the Florida senator dropped out of the presidential race on March 15.

Cruz’s super PACs also struggled to get large checks from new donors in March, according to FEC reports. His cluster of super PACs relied heavily on supporters like hedge fund magnate Bob Mercer who have been with the Texas senator from the beginning.

The latest campaign finance reports, which cover donations through March 31, don’t capture the establishment support the campaign is expected to have picked up in recent weeks as Cruz has wooed major donors in Las Vegas and Manhattan.

Meanwhile, Ohio Gov. John Kasich’s campaign received about $174,000 from 131 former Bush donors along with $92,000 from 97 former Rubio donors during the same timespan.

And then there actually are people who gave to Rubio and Bush that then joined Team Trump — Donald Trump’s campaign received donations from approximately nine former Bush donors and six former Rubio donors, according to the analysis.

Due to how the FEC collects and publishes data on contributions, the numbers are necessarily imprecise. The campaigns are only required to reveal the names of donors who have given more than $200 to a campaign. And because the FEC doesn’t assign donors unique identifiers, misspelled names, and extremely common names can throw off the calculations.

How Donna Edwards Endeared Herself To Black Baltimore Activists

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WASHINGTON — Donna Edwards wanted to get straight to the point.

Inside her Baltimore campaign office last month, Edwards met with local activists from black-led racial justice organizations. They had led protests following the death of Freddie Gray,. Her plan was as simple as the subject was complex: to hear from the activists directly. About the problems. About the solutions. And about places where, as their representative in the United States Senate, she could place resources to help them get things done.

For the activists, her approach was refreshing.

There is no public record of the meeting between the activists and Edwards on her campaign’s social media channels or her campaign's public schedule. A spokesperson from the Edwards campaign, citing an agreement not to disclose details of the meeting with the press, declined to discuss the gathering in any detail. But at a tense moment in politics and activism, Edwards, herself an activist, has taken her roots to the streets in Baltimore, endearing herself and her candidacy to young activists.

“That was the first time in the work I’ve done that an elected official talked directly to us about supporting us in tangible ways, instead of just tweeting about it,” said Adam Jackson, the CEO of Leaders of a Beautiful Struggle (LBS) Baltimore in an interview.

Jackson and other activists said Edwards has become an ally in her short time as a candidate. The state of Maryland, is a third black and brown — and the activists say the community deserves a person in the Senate who can speak directly to their concerns about high unemployment, poverty, and reentry for ex-felons.

For her part, Edwards told BuzzFeed News the interaction with young Baltimore activists helped her become a better candidate. (She's also hoping the traction she's gained will propel her to a surprise victory in Tuesday’s Democratic Senate primary against Rep. Chris Van Hollen.)

“I learned so much from that and it really has helped informed the way that I think and talk about Baltimore and the role of a U.S. senator in trying to help some of those solutions. It was incredibly helpful to me,” said Edwards, recalling the meeting in a recent interview with BuzzFeed News. “Some of the leaders that I've met identify with me and I identify with them. That's how I started.”

In 1994, as executive director of the National Network to End Domestic Violence, Edwards pushed for the Violence Against Women Act of 1994.

Activists describe her as someone doesn't come off as if she's trying too hard to curry favor or impress by talking about complex policy — the conversation usually involves more talk about partnerships.

The other big thing they like? She’s not supported by the Democratic establishment in Maryland. Edwards likes to tout the times she's broken with the Democratic Party over redistricting, which the activists argue dilutes political power in Maryland.

"She was one of the only politicians speaking directly speaking to that," said Dayvon Love, LBS' director of public policy, recalling a 2015 meeting with the congresswoman. “No Democrat was speaking on those issues."

“My goal from the beginning of this campaign was to quietly go community by community, neighborhood by neighborhood, leader by leader and getting to know people. That's not the kind of thing that makes headlines but it's the way I do my work," Edwards said. "I'm so grateful that so many in the community who are active and care a it neighborhoods and about the city have opened themselves up to me and embraced me."

Jackson said the activists believe that ads attacking her as an ineffective lawmaker are anti-black. He said he saw her support picking up in Baltimore City six months ago, but criticized black establishment figures who have stood idly by while she's attacked.

"To me what Chris Van Hollen and others have been doing is racial gas-lighting by characterizing her as incompetent, and by saying that Obama likes him... that's anti-black rhetoric, and another marker why we need people like Donna Edwards," Jackson said. "It's simply using black people’s bodies to an advance an agenda.

Added Jackson, "When you have the system not supporting you and you have someone speaking to marginalized communities, that to me is someone who needs to be in the U.S. Senate."

Love recalled a meeting with Edwards a year ago at Terra Cafe in Baltimore in which he asked her about her relationship to establishment politics were she to win the Senate primary race. "I don’t expect to get the support, and if I were to be elected I won’t owe them anything," he recalled her saying.

"It was just her integrity and clarity of vision," he added. "You could tell that she understood at that time that her support was going to come from the bottom up."

"A lot of time people who are connected to Democratic establishment, there's no access to certain rooms that otherwise might not be open," he said. "I expect that a lot of organizations like our and others to have access to resources that will directly accountable to our community."

If the plan works, Edwards will be strongly favored in the November general election, and is already looking toward victory.

“If we have those relationships now, when I become senator, we're going to use those relationships and work together to focus on the needs of those communities," she said.

This Guy Made Terrifyingly Realistic Masks Of Hillary, Bernie, And Trump

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I’M SCREAMING.

This is Landon Meier, a Denver-based artist who's been making masks for his company, Hyperflesh, since 2000.

This is Landon Meier, a Denver-based artist who's been making masks for his company, Hyperflesh, since 2000.

Jake Nielson / Via Flickr: 28507452@N02

He's most famous for masks of babies' faces, but has also produced scary replicas of Charlie Sheen, Peter Dinklage, and Walter White (Bryan Cranston) from Breaking Bad, among others.

He's most famous for masks of babies' faces, but has also produced scary replicas of Charlie Sheen, Peter Dinklage, and Walter White (Bryan Cranston) from Breaking Bad, among others.

Landon Meier/Hyperflesh

But that's nothing compared to THIS HORROR...

But that's nothing compared to THIS HORROR...

Carly Cooper

WHAT ON GOD'S GREEN EARTH IS THIS?!

WHAT ON GOD'S GREEN EARTH IS THIS?!

Carly Cooper


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DeRay Mckesson's Mayoral Bid Falls Far Short

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Kimberly White / Getty Images

WASHINGTON — DeRay Mckesson's bid to become the next mayor of Baltimore failed Tuesday, with the activist drawing only 3% of the vote in the election.

Catherine Pugh will be Baltimore's next mayor, winning in a large field of politicians seeking control of City Hall.

Reached for comment on Tuesday night, Mckesson said, "We raised more money faster than any local race in the country," in a text message to BuzzFeed News.

He officially declared his outsider candidacy in a Medium post, just 30 minutes before the deadline.

In September 2015, Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake announced she would not seek reelection. Rawlings-Blake had come under fire during and after protests of the death of Freddie Gray, a 25-year-old man who died in police custody. That decision spurred a logjam of candidates seeking the office.

Mckesson's candidacy was not without its victories.

He made waves as a fundraising force, quickly raising $250,000, through the online fundraising tool Crowdpac, which supported his campaign. He raised a majority of his money through corporate executives outside of Baltimore, but argued outside forces with a vested interest could transform the city.

"I have come to realize that the traditional pathway to politics, and the traditional politicians who follow these well-worn paths, will not lead us to the transformational change our city needs," Mckesson wrote on Medium.

But Mckesson's candicacy was dogged by skepticism by people in Baltimore and accusations that he'd sought to rely on his personal celebrity and people from outside of Baltimore to garner financial support. His backers countered that argument on Tuesday night.

"DeRay received more donations than any of his competitors," Liz Jaffe, Crowdpac's political director said in an email to BuzzFeed News. "Every donation to DeRay was someone saying, 'I believe in you.' That's a pretty incredible feat for someone who launched 30 minutes before the deadline to file, and raised more online donations that any local candidate for office in the country. It's pretty clear that this is just the beginning for him."

Still, if he's not proved popular in Baltimore, Mckesson has had several other victories this year, including a March meeting with other civil rights activists, where Mckesson asked President Obama to consider an executive order for police use of force for local, state and federal agencies, which Obama reportedly said the Department of Justice would look into.

During the meeting, outlets reported that Obama said that Mckesson had done "outstanding work mobilizing in Baltimore around these issues."

It's Now Mathematically Impossible For Ted Cruz To Clinch The GOP Nomination

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Michael Conroy / AP

With Donald Trump’s sweep of Tuesday’s primaries, it’s no longer possible for Ted Cruz to win enough delegates to clinch the Republican presidential nomination ahead of the party's convention in July.

To win the nomination outright, a candidate must secure 1,237 delegates. Before Tuesday, Trump had 950 delegates, Cruz had 559, and John Kasich had 153. If Cruz were to win almost all of the remaining delegates — including the 109 unpledged delegates — he could have just passed the threshold.

But Trump went on to win the Delaware, Connecticut, Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Rhode Island, primaries Tuesday night, earning him at least 105 of the 118 delegates at stake.

Cruz walked away with one delegate, and Kasich earned at least five, according to an Associated Press count.

Wilfredo Lee / AP

Voting has yet to take place in 10 states, with 502 combined delegates up for grabs. Even if Cruz were to win every single one, he’d come up around 200 short of hitting 1,237.

That means Cruz can only become the Republican presidential nominee through a contested convention. With Trump as of Tuesday sitting at 1,049, eyes are now turning to the May 3 Indiana primary.

At stake are 57 Republican delegates, and the primary winner takes all. Trump has been leading in polls, and Cruz and Kasich earlier this week announced they would be working together to try to keep him from winning. The RealClearPolitics polling average as of last week showed Trump ahead of Cruz by only six points. Cruz's campaign has said he's focused on closing that gap, and Kasich's campaign announced he will step back to give Cruz a "clear path" there.

Meanwhile, Kasich is looking toward to primaries in New Mexico and Oregon, where a combined 52 delegates will be divided proportionally.

Turning To The General, Clinton Makes Pitch To The "Thoughtful Republican"

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Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

PHILADELPHIA — After a set of decisive victories in Tuesday's Democratic primaries, Hillary Clinton assumed the mantle of her party's presumptive nominee, making a sweeping pitch for unity to Democrats, independents, millions of Bernie Sanders supporters — and to what she called the "thoughtful Republican."

Her speech here marked Clinton's first direct appeal to voters outside the Democratic electorate — a benchmark in a 13-month campaign long occupied with a well-funded challenge from Bernie Sanders and his millions of supporters.

The results on Tuesday — yielding wins for Clinton in Maryland, Delaware, Connecticut, and delegate-heavy Pennsylvania — leave Sanders without a feasible path to the nomination. And as she spoke to a crowd of 1,300 at the convention center in Philadelphia, the city set to host the Democratic National Convention, Clinton all but acknowledged that reality, promising to return as the nominee, to heal her fractured party, and to rally those beyond its membership.

Addressing both parties and those without a political party, Clinton laid out her vision of "a prosperous, inclusive, decent society" — a future, as she put it, "where love trumps hate."

"We will unify our party to win this election and build an America where we can all rise together," Clinton said after taking the stage to the chorus of Survivor's "Eye of the Tiger," a departure from campaign's strict song list, underscoring the occasion.

The figure at the center of this call was, of course, Donald Trump.

"In this election, we will have to stand together and work hard to prevail against candidates on the other side who would threaten all those rights and pit Americans against each other," Clinton said. "So, my friends, if you are a Democrat, an independent, or a thoughtful Republican, you know their approach is not going to build an America where we increase opportunity or decrease inequality."

After the speech, Clinton aides declined to elaborate on what an effort to win over independents and Republicans might entail at this stage in the election.

Jennifer Palmieri, Clinton's communications director, said there's "certainly not anyone in the general electorate" the campaign wouldn't want to win over.

"We think there are reasons that Americans of all stripes should want to support our candidacy," said Palmieri. She cited the "divisive language" and proposals on national security that have been put forward this year by GOP candidates.

"We want everyone to feel welcome," Palmieri said.

The appeal to "thoughtful Republicans" reflects a softening of the rhetoric Clinton has used in recent weeks against Trump and Ted Cruz. At campaign events, Clinton often presents the top-two candidates as symptomatic of the wider party.

"It’s not just Donald Trump or Ted Cruz," she told one group last week. "What they are saying is what most of the Republican elected officials believe.”

And in one of the major speeches of her campaign, delivered late last month on the topic of the Supreme Court, Clinton made the case that Trump and Cruz's "extreme candidacies" came as a reflection and product of the GOP. "Donald Trump didn’t come out of nowhere," she said. "What the Republicans have sown with their extremist tactics, they are now reaping with Donald Trump’s candidacy."

Asked about Clinton's past comments, Brian Fallon, another spokesman, said she had been referring in particular to the far-right faction of the Republican Party.

"Her point all along has been that for a while now the Republican Party has been overtaken by its most extreme fringe, and that Trump and Cruz are a natural outgrowth of that," Fallon said. "But there remains a contingent within the Republican Party that has been abandoned by this rightward lurch."

Trump has alienated many Republicans, especially among certain demographics like regular churchgoers and movement conservatives or libertarians, like David and Charles Koch. He has also frequently performed poorly this year with college-educated voters, especially women and those who live in affluent suburbs — a potential opportunity for Clinton in a general election matchup.

This is an appeal to unify the entire country, Fallon said. "We include Republicans in that absolutely."

LINK: Hillary Clinton’s New Favorite Line: “Donald Trump And Ted Cruz”

LINK: Trump Says If Hillary Clinton Were A Man She Wouldn’t Get “5% Of The Vote”

Two Young Girls Were Hit With Pepper Spray During Clashes At A Trump Protest

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Five people, including the two girls, were stung by the spray.

Donald Trump supporters and opponents clashed outside of Anaheim City Hall in California on Tuesday where five people, including an 8-year-old girl and an 11-year-old girl, were stung with pepper spray by a demonstrator, the Anaheim Police Department told BuzzFeed News.

Donald Trump supporters and opponents clashed outside of Anaheim City Hall in California on Tuesday where five people, including an 8-year-old girl and an 11-year-old girl, were stung with pepper spray by a demonstrator, the Anaheim Police Department told BuzzFeed News.

Christine O'Donnell / Via Facebook: ChristineODonnellNews

There were no serious injuries and no arrests were reported, Anaheim Police spokesperson Sgt. Daron Wyatt said.

The demonstration took place ahead of a scheduled city council meeting where members were due to vote on a resolution to condemn Trump's divisive rhetoric.

Video captured by FOX 11 News shows a Trump opponent pushing a bullhorn into the face a Trump supporter as tensions rise between the two sides during the demonstration. A woman, who appeared to be a Trump supporter, also set off a Taser toward the opponents' side.

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Facebook: video.php / Via Facebook: ChristineODonnellNews

At one point during the demonstration, an opponent set off pepper spray aimed at the pro-Trump crowd, affecting five people including the two children, said Sgt. Wyatt.

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facebook.com / Via facebook.com


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Chris Wallace Is Making Life Tough For All The Candidates, Especially Donald Trump

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T.j. Kirkpatrick for BuzzFeed News

WASHINGTON — On Saturdays, Fox News Sunday anchor Chris Wallace sits in a modest office with a thick binder. He sifts through pages of transcripts and news articles and graphics, piecing together a blueprint.

This, the part that comes before the interview, is Wallace’s favorite. Saturdays are the days he likes best.

“To put that all together into a 15-minute cross-examination, which in effect is what it is, is utterly satisfying to me,” Wallace says.

That cross-examination has become Wallace’s hallmark (“But sir!”) during his 13 years at the helm of Fox News Sunday, which marks 20 years on the air this Thursday.

The anniversary arrives at an unusual time in American politics and for Fox News, nearly a year into Donald Trump’s rise. The Republican frontrunner has an unusual effect on institutions like political and media organizations. Because he is so different from the accepted political routine, Trump often exposes hypocrisies, exacerbates quiet tensions, and reveals the existence of principles.

As cable news networks (including Wallace’s own) have faced criticism for their fever-pitch coverage of Trump, Wallace is having a bit of a moment. His show delivers news. He’s cross-examined all the presidential candidates but one (Hillary Clinton). The debates he moderates with Megyn Kelly and Bret Baier are considered the strongest, most interesting, highest rated of the election cycle. And he hasn’t made any concessions to Trump.

Early on, Wallace bucked the trend of Sunday shows allowing Trump to call into their programs for interviews instead of appearing on air, and says he was “genuinely shocked” last year when he first saw his competitors engage in the practice. “I just in my bones knew it was the wrong way to go,” he says. “And, I just — no discussion, no talking to the second floor in New York — I just said, ‘Over my dead body.’ Not gonna happen.”

Wallace, who left ABC News for his current job in 2003 at a time when the jump from broadcast to cable wasn’t an obvious one, is something of a cable news partisan.

He contends that if you care about politics, it’s cable that provides the news. On big primary nights, he notes, people watch cable. “You’re not going to watch the broadcast networks, because the broadcast networks aren’t even going to cover it,” he says. “So anybody who’s serious about politics, whether it’s covering it or watching it, and following it, we’re the only game in town.”

And he doesn’t buy into the argument that the media “created” Trump, calling him a “natural phenomenon” — though he acknowledges that there have been problems with the coverage.

“Do I think we have over-covered Trump? Absolutely,” he says, noting in particular the frequent airing of uninterrupted Trump speeches and rallies. “Do I think that we have put him on the air too much? Yes.”

He adds, “I don’t mean just Fox — I mean all of cable news. In fact, I don’t think we’re even the worst offender; I think CNN was.”

He thinks there are smart ways to cover Trump — and the current state of the Republican Party — on television. Wallace recalls in 2008, when John McCain was the Republican nominee, receiving emails from viewers about the RINOs.

“There were a number of Republican viewers who were upset about the continued dominance of the ‘establishment’ and these, as they say, Republican in Name Only, who they don’t think are true conservatives,” Wallace says. “That split has certainly only increased in the last eight years — 2010 with the tea party and especially now with Trump. I can just see it in the viewers.”

T.J. Kirkpatrick for BuzzFeed News

And those viewer responses, Wallace says, have led to changes in the show's makeup, primarily the addition of new commentators to its roundtable panel. “I realized we had to have people on the show, not to push for Trump, not to be in any sense pitching Trump, but who understood what was going on in that movement,” he says. “And so we’ve made a concerted, conscious effort to have that representation on the panel of younger, less establishment-type commentators that understand that.”

How Fox News has handled Trump — you can watch Wallace and Megyn Kelly interrogate the billionaire on stage on the same network that airs gentle townhalls with him in primetime — has become a point of intense interest and sometimes criticism among the media and conservatives this year.

Wallace wouldn’t go there. He says the split between news and opinion has always been there on Fox, and that he’s “very pleased and proud to see what a firewall Roger [Ailes] created between the news side and the opinion side.”

“The one difference, and I will compare us to MSNBC in that regard, is that we’ve always had a firewall between the two,” Wallace added.

“It’s the news people who conduct the debates, it’s the news people who are the anchors on primary nights and election nights and at conventions,” he says. He notes that MSNBC has had Rachel Maddow, who hosts her show from a progressive point of view, anchor debates or election nights. “Fox has never done that.”

He’s also got plenty of opinions about the state of the traditional broadcast networks, praising CBS News for its decision to focus on hard news in its coverage, while confessing that his former employer, ABC News, has "moved the most in the direction of tabloid news, news you can use, not what we traditionally consider front-page news." But he's critical of all three evening newscasts.

“I often think to myself, if you really care about politics and government and policy, and all you watched was a network evening news cast, I don’t know how you’d have a clue what’s going on,” he adds.

But it’s clear that Wallace is quite proud of the interviews he’s done with all the candidates — especially Trump — and the exchanges they’ve had this year.

In a March debate, Wallace honed in on a very specific claim of Trump’s: that he could make up a $10 trillion deficit by cutting waste, fraud, and abuse. Predicting what Trump’s answer would be based on prior statements, Wallace came armed with four full-screen graphics, using two of them during the debate to discredit Trump’s claims.

“First time in history that a graphic got a standing ovation at a presidential debate,” Wallace says. ”And my producers were very skeptical of this. When I said, ‘Make these four up,’ and one of them is about defense spending, and one of them is about waste and fraud in various departments, and they said, ‘You know, what if he doesn’t say that?’ And I said, ‘Well, first of all, I’m really confident he is going to say it, and two, if he doesn’t, we’re screwed.’”

“My son, who’s a smartass, said, ‘America wants desperately to know what were on full screens one and three.’”

With the retirement of CBS anchor Bob Schieffer last year, Wallace is now the longest-serving moderator of a Sunday political affairs program — the de facto “dean” of Sunday television. Even with the lightning speed of the political news cycle, Wallace still believes in the power of the platform.

“It’s a Sunday talk show, and I think they have a very special place in the television landscape when you got so many different shows doing so many different things,” he says. “I think it’s the one place that the viewer can still go on a Sunday morning to get serious, in-depth, lengthy, well-researched interviews with top policymakers over serious issues. And that’s what people want.”

T.j. Kirkpatrick for BuzzFeed News


Former Lawmakers Stand By Defense Of Dennis Hastert's Character

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Two ex-Congressmen who wrote letters of support for Dennis Hastert tell BuzzFeed News the former Speaker of the House is being treated unfairly.

Matt Marton / AP

Two former members of Congress passionately defended writing letters of support for former House Speaker Dennis Hastert despite the Republican lawmaker's acknowledgement of past "wrongdoing" while he was a wrestling coach in Yorkville, Illinois in the 1970s.

On Wednesday, Hastert was sentenced to 15 months in prison after pleading guilty in October to charges that he illegally structured withdrawals of money to avoid reporting requirements in an effort to hide "prior bad acts." Four people have come forward claiming Hastert sexually abused them, while a woman, Jolene Burdge, says he abused her brother, Stephan Reinboldt, who died in 1995. Hastert publicly apologized on Wednesday, saying he was "sorry to those I have hurt and misled."

Before his sentencing, a number of Hastert supporters had written the court urging leniency, including five former members of the House.

In interviews before and after Wednesday's hearing two of Hastert's colleagues — former Republican Reps. Thomas Ewing and John Doolittle — told BuzzFeed News that they stood by their praise for Hastert's character in letters they wrote to his judge which were released last week.

"I'm speaking of the time I served with him in public office," Ewing, who represented Illinois' 15th district from 1991-2001, said on Wednesday. "And he is not accused of any wrongdoing during that period."

He added, "His community of Yorkville loved Dennis Hastert and he served in their school system. I don't know — he didn't seem to have — he certainly didn't have that reputation."

Despite this, Ewing said he approved of the sentence handed down by Judge Thomas Durkin, who referred to Hastert as "a serial child molester." Ewing said his opinion was not affected by the fact that he knew Tom Cross, a former GOP leader in the Illinois House and brother of Scott Cross, who testified at the hearing that Hastert's abuse of him in high school was his "darkest secret."

On Tuesday, John Doolittle, who spent 18 years in the House as a California Rep., was more adamant, saying he felt it would be wrong to send Hastert to prison partly due to sexual assault allegations he had never been tried for.

"I don't know anything about the people who have come forward," he said. "I know somebody was trying to extort him for money and instead of punishing that person, why I guess they've been given immunity so they can cook up some phony crime of structuring and go after Denny Hastert and try and hurt his reputation and everything. That bothers me."

Three other former U.S. congressmen who also wrote letters to the judge, former House Republican Majority Leader Tom DeLay, Florida Rep. Porter Goss, and California Rep. David Dreier, could not be reached for comment.

In a separate interview on Tuesday, Ewing vigorously rebutted the suggestion that the molestation should change his assessment that Hastert was a person of, as he put it, "honor, integrity and talent."

"I mean, what you're saying is, a person makes a mistake, we should just hang them all?" he said. "Put them all in prison forever?"

Doolittle, meanwhile, argued that Hastert should be given a lenient sentence because of his illnesses, such as his recent stroke, and because structuring was a "phony crime."

"I don't think spending one's own money, for whatever purpose, ought to be a federal crime," he said. "So I strongly object to that whole idea. The whole idea of structuring makes no sense and I would vote to repeal that crime if I were still in Congress."

Doolittle, who in his letter praised Hastert for having "always made sure" that members of Congress received the annual cost of living adjustment, further contended that past claims of sexual assault had proven both true and false.

"We don't actually know what has happened," he said. "We know that a few people, a handful of people, have come forward and made an allegation 30-some years after the event and well beyond the statute of limitations, which exists to protect people from these kinds of latent claims."

He continued, "I think it's unfair to in essence sentence him for crimes for which he was never charged and never got a trial on. That's what's going on here. The people who are making this issue want to sentence him for something that he was never tried and convicted of. And that's wrong. And I'm outraged by it."

Ewing also compared Hastert's situation to previous scandals involving powerful politicians whom he said had exploited their authority for similar purposes.

"What is the most serious thing — I mean, do you want to make allegations of behavior against John F. Kennedy?" he said. "Do you want to make allegations of behavior against Bill Clinton or Lyndon Johnson or any other president who's taken advantage of people in that regard? History's full of them."

Clarifying the comparison of Hastert to Clinton, Ewing said, "The charges are all different. But he used his authority and power over an employee, a young person. Maybe it was all consensual. I don't know. I'm not bringing Bill Clinton into it. I'm just trying to get you to be halfway reasonable."

Trump In 2011 Praised Hosni Mubarak’s Ouster As A “Good Thing”

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In a speech on Wednesday, Trump criticized the Obama administration for supporting the ouster of Egypt’s president in 2011.

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In his foreign policy address on Wednesday, Donald Trump criticized the Obama administration for supporting the removal of Egypt's president Hosni Mubarak in 2011. Trump took a much different position at the time of Mubarak's ouster, describing it as a "good thing."

"He supported the ouster of a friendly regime in Egypt that had a longstanding peace treaty with Israel, and then helped bring the Muslim Brotherhood to power in its place," Trump said of Obama on Wednesday.

On multiple occasions in 2011, however, Trump ridiculed Mubarak and called his ouster a positive thing.

"If you take look at Egypt — I'm not blaming anything or anybody for Egypt — although I would like to know how a man worth $70 billion that's working as head of a country," Trump told Fox News' Greta Van Susteren on Feb. 12, 2011. "That's an interesting case. I understand he has five Mara-a-Lagos and they're trying to justify this guy. So, it's a good thing that they got him out, hopefully they're gonna get the money back."

"The fact is, they don't listen to us," Trump added. "We give them billions and billions of dollars a year. And Obama, and I'm not blaming him for this, but they don't listen to us. Nothing that happened took place because of what we said in terms of the United States. And we do feed them billions a year. So there's just something wrong. It is not resonating. The country has lost. We just are not respected any longer."

Trump said he would have demanded Egypt do what the United States wanted or cut off aid.

As BuzzFeed News has previously reported, Trump also initially supported interventions in Iraq and Libya, but now calls both disasters and claims to have opposed both at the time.

Speaking with CNN on Feb. 11, 2011, Trump said Mubarak wasn't the sort of leader the Egyptians wanted and again said it was out of the president's control.

"He lives in tremendous estates all over the world," Trump said. "Supposedly, he's taken $50 to $70 billion dollars. Is this the kind of a leader they want? I don't think so."

Added Trump, "I don't think he has handled it, these events are beyond him."

Ted Cruz Announces Carly Fiorina As His Running Mate

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The Texas senator is seeking to energize supporters and stop Donald Trump from clinching the GOP nomination.

Michael Conroy / AP

INDIANAPOLIS — As the Republican primary goes into its end game with Donald Trump looking likely to clinch the nomination before the convention, Ted Cruz is running out of time to change the course of the race — and on Wednesday, he tried to do that by naming Carly Fiorina as his running mate.

His unusual announcement — candidates generally don't announce a running mate until after they've become the nominee — signals how crucial a moment this is for the Cruz campaign. Cruz is going all-in on the Indiana primary next week that is a must-win to keep Trump from steamrolling his way to the necessary number of delegates to clinch the nomination. And five overperforming Trump wins on Tuesday night have made his nomination seem more likely than ever, making it necessary for Cruz to try and wrest control of the news cycle.

Trump reacted in a statement soon after the announcement was made, calling it a "desperate attempt to save a failing campaign."

"After massive defeats in Arizona, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Delaware, Connecticut and Maryland, (in addition to twenty other contests) and given the fact that Senator Cruz has millions of votes less than me and is being clobbered on the delegate front, this is a pure waste of time.

It reminds me very much of the already failed Kasich 'collusion' ­a desperate attempt to save a failing campaign by an all talk, no action politician. The people of Indiana are very smart ­and they will see through this just like they saw through the already failed Kasich alliance. Cruz has no path to victory — he is only trying to stay relevant."

Unlike Fiorina's endorsement of Cruz in Miami in March, which took the political press by surprise, her being picked as his running mate was widely assumed as soon as it came out that she was being vetted for the position. And the idea had clearly been in the works for some time. On Wednesday, the crowd in downtown Indianapolis already had signs printed with the new "Cruz Fiorina 2016" logo on one side, "Cruz Carly 2016" on the other. And this was even before Cruz had said the magic words: that if he is nominated, he will run with Fiorina on the ticket to be vice president. Plus, the Cruz team had been open about the fact that it was vetting people weeks ago, and the new website, CruzCarly.com, was registered on Monday.

At the rollout event here, nearly all of Cruz's senior staff was present, and Cruz wore a suit as opposed to his typical trail wear of jeans and a blazer or sweater. The campaign made the most of the moment, which took place in Indianapolis' Pan Am Pavilion in front of a crowd of a few hundred; Cruz spoke for close to 30 minutes, maximizing the event's exposure on TV, while Fiorina took the stage and spoke (and even sang a bit) for nearly 20.

Both Cruz and Fiorina's speeches focused heavily on Donald Trump, with Cruz referring to the frontrunner as a "no-good scoundrel," a "narcissist," and "abusive and angry."

"He does not represent me and he does not represent my party," Fiorina said of Trump. Cruz mentioned Fiorina's having taken on Trump during a primary debate after Trump had made disparaging comments about her appearance — another indication of why Fiorina was chosen. Both Cruz and Fiorina repeatedly drew parallels between Trump and Hillary Clinton, a major theme of Cruz's criticism of Trump. Even before Wednesday, Cruz has often highlighted Fiorina's contrast with Clinton on the trail, frequently saying that Clinton would be terrified of Fiorina.


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Georgia Executes Man Who Killed Two Children And Their Father

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(Georgia Department of Corrections via AP, File)

Georgia executed Daniel Anthony Lucas Wednesday evening, marking the fifth execution in the state this year.

Lucas was sentenced to death in 1999 for his role in the killing of three people — two of which were children — as part of a robbery. He was 19 at the time of the murders.

On Tuesday, the Georgia Board of Probation and Parole rejected Lucas' request for clemency, but the agency denied to the request on Tuesday. He asked the state supreme court to step in, pointing to his troubled upbringing and his lack of maturity at the time. On Wednesday, the Georgia Supreme Court denied that request.

Lucas also asked the U.S. Supreme Court to halt his execution on the same grounds, which denied the request late Wednesday. He was pronounced dead at 9:54 p.m. local time.

Lucas, along with an accomplice, were burglarizing the home of Steven and Gerri Ann Moss, according to court documents. During the robbery, 11-year-old Bryan Moss came home from school, and Lucas subsequently shot him. Later, his 15-year-old sister, Kristin Moss came home from school. Lucas' accomplice placed her in a chair and shot her twice with a .357 handgun. Shortly after, Steven Moss, their father came home and the accomplice shot him four times.

After discovering what his accomplice had done, Lucas again shot both of the children. His accomplice was executed in 2010.

Lucas waived his right to an attorney and admitted his role in the killings in a videotaped confession.

During the trial, his attorneys pointed out that he had taken between six and 10 Xanax pills before the murders, and had been drinking red wine and had taken an unknown quantity of a pain reliever.

His expert pointed out at the trial that the amount of drugs he took easily could have led to him overdosing.

“it would be difficult to be able to co-ordinate the making of a sandwich, much less logically plan out thoughts," Dr. John Cusack said at the trial. Lucas' “thoughts were, I think, acting more like a Roman candle, just kind of going off in undirected manners, which would be the case with this type of intoxication.”

Read the court filings before the Supreme Court:


Bernie Sanders To Cut Hundreds Of Staffers After Losses On Tuesday

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Aaron Bernstein / Reuters

Bernie Sanders' campaign will shed hundreds of staffers across the country, the candidate told the New York Times in an interview on Wednesday. The move comes after Hillary Clinton defeated Sanders in four out of five states in Tuesday's primaries.

“We want to win as many delegates as we can, so we do not need workers now in states around country. We don’t need people right now in Connecticut. That election is over. We don’t need them in Maryland. So what we are going to do is allocate our resources to the 14 contests that remain, and that means that we are going to be cutting back on staff," Sanders told the Times. When pressed by the Times on how many staffers would be affected, Sanders said "hundreds."

On Wednesday, three campaign staffers told BuzzFeed News that there had not been guidance about the layoffs and there is some uncertainty currently about what's happening.

In a statement to BuzzFeed News, a senior campaign official said that the campaign will continue to have a staff of "more than 300 workers."

“Our campaign has now completed 80% of the primaries and caucuses, said spokesman Michael Briggs. "We look forward to winning here in Indiana next Tuesday and in the few remaining states and territories holding primaries and caucuses in May and June. That means that we no longer require many of the loyal and dedicated state and national support staffers who helped us in places like New York, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Maryland, Delaware, Pennsylvania and other states where the nominating contests have been completed.

“We will continue to have a strong and dedicated staff of more than 300 workers who are going to help us win in California and other contests still to come," Briggs said. “This campaign believes that we have a path toward victory and we’re going to marshal our resources to do everything we can to win the Democratic nomination.”

Clinton has a nearly insurmountable lead over Sanders in the earned delegates needed to clinch the Democratic nomination.

After his losses on Tuesday, the Sanders campaign issued a statement vowing to stay in the race until the last primaries in June in order to pick up as many delegates as possible as a way to influence the party's platform in July.

"That’s why we are in this race until the last vote is cast," the statement read. "That is why this campaign is going to the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia with as many delegates as possible to fight for a progressive party platform that calls for a $15 an hour minimum wage, an end to our disastrous trade policies, a Medicare-for-all health care system, breaking up Wall Street financial institutions, ending fracking in our country, making public colleges and universities tuition free and passing a carbon tax so we can effectively address the planetary crisis of climate change.”

Supreme Court Skeptical Of Former Virginia Governor's Prosecution

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Former Virginia Gov. Robert McDonnell leaves the U.S. Supreme Court building on April 27, 2016.

Alex Wong / Getty Images

WASHINGTON — Supreme Court justices on Wednesday appeared likely to overturn former Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell's corruption conviction, although it was not clear the reasoning they would use for doing so.

Justice Stephen Breyer took the lead in questioning on Wednesday, warning that the case — with underlying facts involving a Ferrari ride from a vacation home to Richmond and a tobacco-based dietary supplement — could give "dangerous" powers to "virtually uncontrollable" prosecutors to pursue charges against public officials.

The case, Breyer said, presents "as fundamental a real separation of powers problem as I've seen."

The former governor was convicted for violating the federal honest-services fraud statute following an indictment for his role in a bribery scheme with the head of Star Scientific, a Virginia-based company that was promoting Anatabloc, a dietary supplement. McDonnell and his wife accepted more than $175,000 in money and luxury goods from Jonnie Williams, Star Scientific's CEO. In return, the government argued and a jury agreed, McDonnell agreed to use "the power of his office to help Williams's company."

After his conviction was upheld on appeal by the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals, McDonnell asked for and received a stay of his sentence pending Supreme Court action on his case — a move that allowed him to attend Wednesday's arguments at the Supreme Court.

The conviction and question before the Supreme Court — and the concerns raised by Breyer — related to the definition of "official acts" under the statute and an underlying bribery statute. The former governor's lawyers argue that the instructions given to the jury about the definition of "official acts" — the definition advanced by the federal government — was too broad.

The U.S. government argues that "official act" includes "any action on a matter within the scope of a public employee's official duties, including the exercise of influence on decisions made by others."

McDonnell's lawyer argued Wednesday that such a definition is unworkable — and many members of the Supreme Court appeared to agree, at least in part.

"In order to engage in 'official action,' an official must either make a government decision or urge someone else to do so," McDonnell attorney Noel Francisco argued. "The line is between access to decision-­makers on the one hand and trying to influence those decisions on the other."

Later, when questioning Deputy Solicitor General Michael Dreeben — in his 100th argument before the justices — Breyer laid out his concerns about the government's position again.

"I say that is a recipe for giving the Department of Justice and the prosecutors enormous power over elected officials who are not necessarily behaving honestly," he told Dreeben, adding: "I am looking for the line that will control the shift of power that I fear."

Dreeben countered that it is McDonnell's argument "is a recipe for corruption," allowing public officials to require "paying for access" — so long as those officials "do[] not put a thumb on the scale of justice." Later, in response to a question from Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Francisco acknowledged that his position was that such an action might be illegal for other reasons but would not be illegal under the bribery statute.

Further still, McDonnell's lawyers argue that, if the government's understanding of "official acts" is right, then the law itself is unconstitutionally vague — a point picked up in Wednesday's arguments by Chief Justice John Roberts.

When Dreeben suggested it would be "absolutely stunning" for the court to hold that bribery and corruption laws "on the books since the beginning of this nation" are unconstitutionally vague, Justice Anthony Kennedy shot back: "Would it be absolutely stunning to say that the government has given us no workable standard [for defining 'official act']?"

Even Justice Elena Kagan, who was skeptical in her questioning of Francisco in the first part of Wednesday's arguments, pressed back hard against her former colleague in the Solicitor General's Office when Dreeben attempted to defend the McDonnell prosecution and conviction.

"[T]his might have been perfectly chargeable," Kagan said of the overall bribery scheme alleged in the indictment, "but I guess I'm troubled by these particular charges and instructions," which she said "seems to make every piece of evidence" into an "official act," rather than focusing on the ultimate goal of getting the university to engage in testing the Anatabloc.

The court is expected to issue a decision in the case by the end of June.


Carly Fiorina Randomly Burst Into Song After She Became Ted Cruz's Running Mate

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WHAT. JUST. HAPPENED?!

ICYMI, Carly Fiorina announced Wednesday that she'd accepted an offer from Ted Cruz to be his running mate in the Republican presidential contest, in an unusual bid by his campaign to gain momentum and stop Donald Trump's march toward the GOP nomination.

ICYMI, Carly Fiorina announced Wednesday that she'd accepted an offer from Ted Cruz to be his running mate in the Republican presidential contest, in an unusual bid by his campaign to gain momentum and stop Donald Trump's march toward the GOP nomination.

Michael Conroy / AP

Cruz said he'd gotten to know Fiorina pretty well since she endorsed him back in March, adding that she's become very close to his two young daughters, whom she apparently makes up songs for.

Cruz said he'd gotten to know Fiorina pretty well since she endorsed him back in March, adding that she's become very close to his two young daughters, whom she apparently makes up songs for.

Michael Conroy / AP

Then, halfway through her speech, this happened...

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CNN / Via buzzfeed-video1.s3.amazonaws.com

♫ I know two girls that I just adore
I'm so happy I can see them more
'Cause we travel on the bus all day
We get to play
We get to play! ♫


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Mexican Rock Band Maná To Perform At White House On Cinco De Mayo

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The White House's annual Cinco de Mayo event is getting an authentic Mexican infusion, with popular rock band Maná set to perform on May 5.

"Wow, if you had told me 25 years ago that one day the band Maná would play in the White House, I wouldn't have believed it," said frontman Fher Olvera in a statement to BuzzFeed News. "We feel proud to share our music and culture that without a doubt is an integral part of the United States."

The White House hailed the band from Guadalajara, Mexico as iconic and see the event as a way to unite the community and show support for Mexico, Mexican-Americans and Latinos at large, noting that the band has been "super" supportive of President Obama and he is "a big fan."

The top-selling Latin rock band of all-time, which supported Obama's reelection campaign in 2012 at a Las Vegas concert, inserted itself into the 2016 election when it denounced Donald Trump's comments early in his campaign last summer.

It dedicated a song to him entitled "Somos Más Americanos," "We Are More American," at a Staples Center concert in Los Angeles, where they hold the record for most sold-out shows.

"There is a character named Donald Trump, who made very violent declarations with great hatred of Mexicans and Latin Americans and called us rapists, criminals, drug traffickers," Olvera said at the time, calling him a racist. "This is all trash."

They really don't like Trump — at the Latin Grammy's four months later, using music as a "weapon of protest," they held up sign that read "Latinos United Don't Vote For Racists!"

The Latino community and immigration in particular have once again become a major part of the election, with Democrats hoping to maintain gains made by Obama at the presidential level, and hoping that Trump's rhetoric will help in that pursuit.

The prolific band, known for rock hits like Oye Mi Amor and love songs like Labios Compartidos, has also written songs about Mexican politics and gotten involved in Get Out The Vote efforts in the U.S.

Maná also performed at Obama's inaugural ball in 2013 and will play five to seven songs, though the song list has not yet been determined.




Politics Podcast: The Good, Bad, And Just Plain Weird Surrogates Of 2016

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Episode 2 of No One Knows Anything: The BuzzFeed Politics Podcast.

Bill Clinton is a great speaker. But in 2016 he has not been great when it comes to speaking on behalf of his wife's presidential campaign.

Bill Clinton is a great speaker. But in 2016 he has not been great when it comes to speaking on behalf of his wife's presidential campaign.

Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

It's a far cry from Bill Clinton's turn on the campaign trail in 2012.

It's a far cry from Bill Clinton's turn on the campaign trail in 2012.

A headline from a different time.

NPR / Via npr.org

Bill is not the only gaffe-prone surrogate of 2016. Bernie's got 'em, Donald's got 'em. Everyone's got 'em. Trump has the gaffe-iest surrogate of all, Ben Carson.

Bill is not the only gaffe-prone surrogate of 2016. Bernie's got 'em, Donald's got 'em. Everyone's got 'em. Trump has the gaffe-iest surrogate of all, Ben Carson.

Joe Raedle / Getty Images


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Paul Manafort: Trump Hasn’t Ruled Out Taking Money From Big Donors In The General

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“He hasn’t made any decisions yet.”

Eduardo Munoz / Reuters

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Paul Manafort, a senior adviser to Donald Trump's presidential campaign, said in a radio interview on Thursday that Trump hasn't made any decisions as to whether or not he will accept large contributions from outside donors in the general election.

Trump has financed his campaign largely with his own money and small donations, swearing off large donors and super PACs. In an interview with Laura Ingraham on Thursday, Manafort said Trump was willing to help the Republican National Committee raise money if he becomes the nominee.

"Well the point is that Donald Trump has been making on the campaign trail is that he's financing his own campaign," Manafort said. "That's very important for him to say now in his mind because he wants people to know that he owes nobody anything other than the American people, or the voters who are picking, choosing his candidacy."

"When it comes to the general election, we are no longer running as an individual, we are running as the head of a ticket," he continued. "And so the party itself will be doing some things to raise money, and Mr. Trump has indicated that he'd be willing to help the party. But as far as he himself is concerned—but his point is he wants to make sure that he's not beholden to anyone but the American people."

Asked if this meant Trump was ruling out accepting money from big donors in the future, Manafort said Trump hadn't made any decisions yet.

"No, what I'm talking about now is the ramp up to the convention itself, and after he is the presumptive nominee, some of the things that they do," he continued. "He hasn't made any decisions yet. He has basically said, 'I am only running my campaign right now, I'm not taking money from anybody, and I'm not going to take any money from anybody.' Whether, how he will participate, in a broader context is yet to be determined."

Pat Toomey: "Outrageous" For Democratic Challenger To Tie Me To Trump

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Facing what is expected to be a close race for reelection, the incumbent Republican senator from Pennsylvania says he plans to support Trump if he becomes the nominee.

Marc Levy / AP

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Republican Sen. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania said on Wednesday that it's "outrageous" for his Democratic opponent Katie McGinty to tie him to Donald Trump.

Toomey, whose spot in the Senate is considered vulnerable, made the comment on the Dom Giordano Program after the host, imitating McGinty, said, "Well, it's Pat Toomey and Donald Trump, that's what we're gonna run on, and that's a bigotry ticket."

"Yeah, that's pretty outrageous actually," Toomey replied. "But Dom, you know how this presidential race has been unfolding. I supported Marco Rubio. He was my first choice. I still think he'd have been a great president and a great candidate. As of yesterday, we were down to three guys standing and I voted for Ted Cruz."

"They, you know, Katie McGinty may somehow try to tie me to Donald Trump. You know, fine. She can do whatever she's gonna feel she need to do. But the fact is, she is in lockstep with Hillary Clinton. She actually agrees with Hillary Clinton and the most liberal wing of the Democrats on everything," he said of his opponent, who became the Democratic nominee in the Senate race after defeating Joe Sestak in Tuesday's primary.

Asked what he thought about Trump being the nominee, Toomey said that the businessman's odds were "improving" and that he would support him in his campaign against Clinton.

"Well, look, you know, obviously, it looks like his odds have been improving recently," Toomey said. "Yesterday was an amazing—I had a chance to go through the numbers outside of Pennsylvania. So he does not have this wrapped up yet and we could still have an open convention, but certainly he's in a very strong position. And look, I've said all along, I intend to support the Republican nominee. Donald Trump was not my first choice. He wasn't my second choice. But, you know, I don't want to see Hillary Clinton take this country further to the left, to make the terrible policy of President Obama permanent, which she would tend to do."

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