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Can Democrats Ever Get Along Again?

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The latest episode of No One Knows Anything: The BuzzFeed Politics Podcast.

Jonathan Alcorn / AFP / Getty Images

The Democratic primary is, effectively, over. President Obama formally endorsed Hillary Clinton Thursday, two days after she won overwhelmingly in Tuesday's Democratic primaries, the last major voting of the long primary process.

For Bernie Sanders supporters, all that's really left to decide is whether or not to get on board the Clinton train. Sanders has not left the race yet, vowing to stay in through Tuesday's District of Columbia primary while also reaching out to Clinton's campaign to begin the unifying process.

Will Sanders supporters go along? In the run up to California's Democratic primary election last week, Sanders supporters were split — many said they would vote for Clinton in November if she was the party's nominee, but more than a few said they wouldn't.

On this week's episode of No One Knows Anything: The BuzzFeed Politics Podcast, supporters on both weighed in on what they're going to do next.

Rep. Xavier Becerra, a Democrat from Los Angeles, is one of the most progressive members of the House. But he's also the fourth-ranking member of the House Democratic caucus, making him a card-carrying member of the party establishment.

Becerra saw a divide in the party between types of progressives — purists, who he said often come from a life of privilege — and pragmatists, who are more willing to accept some of what they want even if they get some of what they don't.

The latter type, among which Becerra counts himself, will flock to Clinton after the Sanders campaign ends, he suggested.

"People who are progressives who can dream and because they lived a decent life, their dreams can become a reality without much effort, those are the progressives I think have to recognize that you've got to wake up," he said. "The progressives that I think are going to be fervently for Hillary Clinton in November, like my parents and me, who understand that you've got to dream but, man, dreams don't put food on the table."


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Clinton Looks To Add Young Voters To Her Coalition Against Trump

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Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

Hillary Clinton is taking aim at one of her weak points: young voters.

On Friday, just three days after securing the Democratic nomination, Clinton launched a new "millennial engagement" program, targeting voters under the age of 35 with three new hires — including one from the Bernie Sanders campaign.

The new team comes together after a long-fought primary against Sanders, the Vermont senator whose campaign was able to peel away students and twenty-somethings in large numbers. Clinton aides, now preparing for a general election against Donald Trump, view young people as a crucial piece of the electorate, building on an existing coalition of women, older voters, and people of color.

The program expands on the Clinton's campus outreach effort, an endeavor that largely failed in primary states against Sanders. Campaign operatives now hope to widen their reach to voters under the age of 30, while keeping a focus on winning back college-age voters.

Kunoor Ojha, a former Sanders aide set to join the millennial engagement program, is the first member of the senator's staff to join the Clinton campaign, an aide said.

The campaign plans to send the youth outreach team around the country to "listen directly to millennial voters," according to a Clinton official. The team of three operatives will also work directly with staffers in battleground states to create local outreach programs and hold "working group" meetings with voters under 35.

Anne Hubert, formerly a senior vice president at Viacom, comes to the effort as special adviser for millennial engagement. Hubert, not from a traditional campaign background, led Viacom's Scratch, a project focused on young consumers.

Sarah Audelo, a former political and field director at Rock the Vote, will lead the team's outreach and organizing efforts as Clinton's youth vote director.

And Ojha, the former Sanders staffer, will serve as national campus and student organizing director — a role that mirrors her job on the senator's campaign.

In the Democratic primary, voters under the age of 30 backed Sanders by wide double-digit margins. Still, with a general election match-up against Trump, Clinton strategists see the chance to gain back much of that slice of the electorate.

According to a poll this spring from the Harvard Institute of Politics, voters under 30 prefer Clinton to Trump by a wide margin: 61% said they would vote for Clinton, compared to 25% for Trump. The survey also found that young people’s interest in any Republican candidate dropped significantly over the course of the last year.

Clinton may also look to President Obama for help with young voters.

The president endorsed Clinton on Thursday in a web video, and made note of the young people who supported Sanders — just as they propelled his candidacy against Clinton, and later John McCain, in 2008. Obama, whose approval rating stands at around 50%, enjoys higher yet ratings with people under 30 in particular.

"Just like eight years ago, there are millions of Americans, not just Democrats, who have cast their ballots for the very first time," Obama said in the video. "And a lot of that is thanks to Sen. Bernie Sanders who has run an incredible campaign."

"Embracing that message," he said, "is going to help us win in November."

Donald Trump Once Said He Didn't Believe In Heaven Or Hell

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“…we go someplace.”

Jonathan Ernst / Reuters

Donald Trump spoke about his faith this week in an interview with columnist Cal Thomas, boasting of his "great relationships" with ministers and the clergy and predicting he will do very well with evangelicals in the general election.

"I'm going to treat my religion, which is Christian, with great respect and care," Trump said in the interview. And on who Jesus is to him, Trump answered, "Jesus to me is somebody I can think about for security and confidence. Somebody I can revere in terms of bravery and in terms of courage and, because I consider the Christian religion so important, somebody I can totally rely on in my own mind."

Trump, over the course of the election, has played up his Presbyterian faith in typical Trump fashion as a way to appeal to evangelicals — praising the Bible by saying it is even better than his book The Art of the Deal and answering that his favorite verse is "an eye for an eye." But throughout his career in public life before his presidential run, Trump's actual views of religion and his own personal faith have been difficult to pin down.

In a lengthy 1989 profile with the Chicago Tribune, Donald Trump said he did not believe in heaven or hell but that the dead "go somewhere."

In the profile, Trump was asked by reporter Glenn Plaskin if he was worried about his own mortality. "No," Trump answered. "I'm fatalistic, and I protect myself as well as anybody can. I prepare for things. But ultimately we all end up going."

Trump was heading up the stairs to dinner when he turned back to Plaskin, contemplating the afterlife. "No," he said. "I don't believe in reincarnation, heaven or hell — but we go someplace."

"Do you know," he said, "I cannot, for the life of me, figure out where."

Plaskin told BuzzFeed News of Trump's comment to him more than two decades ago: "In a thoughtful way, he was expressing what many people may feel — that death is a mystery, that we don't quite know what happens after it."

In a 1997 profile in Playboy, Trump is described as "not a religious man":

Trump is not a religious man, not in the traditional sense nor in Marla's New Age manner. Still, she pesters him to go with her to church on Sundays.

"I don't want to go to that hillbilly church you go to," he tells her. "If I'm going, I want to go to a church where somebody knows me."

What purpose if one is not seen to worship?

"Tony," he asks his butler, "what's that church?"

"St. Andrew's, sir."

"Who does Donald know at St. Andrew's?" Marla asks.

"God," says Tony.

And the Donald laughs all the way up the stairs.

By 1999, when Trump began looking at a run for president on the Reform Party ticket, he differentiated between belief in God and participating in organized religion.

"Well, I think there's a difference between believing in God and organized religion, number one," said Trump on Today. "I think that God and the belief in God is more important than organized religion. But I think organized religion's important in that it keeps people in the straight and narrow."

Today, Trump describes himself as a regular church-going Presbyterian.

"I love Iowa. And, look, I don't have to say it, I'm Presbyterian," said Trump earlier this year to Post. "Can you believe it? Nobody believes I'm Presbyterian. I'm Presbyterian. I'm Presbyterian. I'm Presbyterian. Boy, that's down the middle of the road folks, in all fairness."

Clinton VP Prospect Tim Kaine Supports Heller Gun Decision

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A Clinton policy adviser has said Clinton believes the Supreme Court decision was “wrongly decided.”

Jonathan Ernst / Reuters

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Democratic Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia said in a radio interview this week that he supports a 2008 Supreme Court decision ruling that individuals have a right to own firearms, marking a contrast with Hillary Clinton's position on that decision.

Kaine is widely considered one of the top prospects to be the running mate of the presumptive Democratic nominee.

In an interview on Wednesday on Washington, D.C. radio station WMAL, Kaine answered a series of questions about how his position on the Second Amendment differs from Clinton's.

"There's a question there in her mind about whether or not there is a right, so where are you?" the host asked. "I mean, do you believe there is a right?"

"I do," Kaine said, before bringing up the decision in D.C. v. Heller, wherein the Court overturned a handgun ban in Washington, D.C., ruling that the Second Amendment protects the rights of individuals to own firearms.

Kaine said, "There has been a long-standing legal question about whether the Second Amendment conferred an individual right or whether it was really more about the well-regulated militias. I strongly believe that there's an individual right. I completely accept the Heller decision that says the right is individual. But the Heller decision said, like the other amendments, the First Amendment for example, there can be reasonable regulations."

A Clinton campaign spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Asked on Sunday on ABC's "This Week" if she agreed with the Heller decision that an individual's right to bear arms is a constitutional right, Clinton didn't answer directly.

"If it is a constitutional right, then it, like every other constitutional right, is subject to reasonable regulation," she said.

Her policy advisor told Bloomberg in May that Clinton believes the case was "wrongly decided in that cities and state should have the power to craft common sense laws to keep their residents safe, like safe storage laws to prevent toddlers from accessing guns."

In the interview on Wednesday, Kaine mostly emphasized points of agreement with Clinton, saying he supported background checks. He argued that gun manufacturers should not be immune from liability, saying the ability to sue them should be governed by state law.

The Virginia Sen. also addressed the VP speculation. He said he felt his "highest and best use" was in the Senate.

"It's flattering to be mentioned but my gut tells me that my highest and best use is right here in the Senate and that's where I can be the most help," Kaine said.

A Subdued Trump Is Embraced At Evangelical Conference

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Joshua Roberts / Reuters

WASHINGTON — Speaking mostly from a teleprompter, Donald Trump charmed a conference full of evangelical activists on Friday after a tumultuous week for his campaign.

Trump spoke to the Faith and Freedom Coalition's Road to Majority Conference at D.C.'s Omni Shoreham Hotel on Friday, taking the stage 45 minutes behind schedule. Trump focused mostly on Hillary Clinton and gave the kind of controlled, measured performance Republicans have been hoping he would deliver after a disastrous week dominated by Trump's racist attacks on a judge.

FFC head Ralph Reed introduced Trump as someone who has "become a good friend," and had earlier in the morning given a speech urging evangelicals to back Trump while obliquely acknowledging his flaws.

"Unlike a lot of our friends on the other side, we're not looking for a political messiah, because we already have a messiah," Reed said. "Perfection is not the measure that should be applied," Reed said, not to any political leader or person.

Evangelicals were "called to put away our ‘my way or the highway’ pride," Reed said. "Different persons have different modes of excellence."

Trump finally arrived after a long interlude in which Reed had to improvise while Trump headed toward the venue, and gave a relatively short, controlled speech that stood out only for its similarity to any other politician's standard stump speech.

Trump alternated between reading off the teleprompter and appearing to ad-lib every few lines (dropping in "believe me" and other catchphrases), his tone and demeanor markedly different in either mode.

Trump did not mention Gonzalo Curiel, the judge in the Trump University case whom Trump has repeatedly attacked because of his Mexican heritage; the attacks have caused turmoil in the Republican Party and Republican leaders have publicly and privately begged him to stop. He didn't mention Elizabeth Warren, who endorsed Hillary Clinton yesterday and whom Trump has been referring to as "Pocahontas" on Twitter. And when protesters interrupted his speech, Trump stayed cool, merely remarking, "Very rude." Trump gave a standard anti–Hillary Clinton speech with a few nods to his evangelical audience, vowing, "We will respect and defend Christian Americans. Christian Americans."

For this, Trump received a standing ovation. The scene offered a sharp contrast from a talk Trump gave last year to the Values Voter Summit, another gathering of Christian political activists, where he was booed. There was also the Family Leadership Summit in Iowa last year, where Trump said he had never sought forgiveness from God.

The embrace at the Faith and Freedom Coalition conference comes despite Trump's shaky credentials on the issues these voters care about, including abortion and marriage. But the stakes have changed now that Trump is the nominee.

"I think increasingly the faith community is feeling more and more confident that they can be comfortable supporting him enthusiastically," said Steve Scheffler, head of the Iowa Faith and Freedom Coalition. "There are gonna be two choices; one’s gonna win and one’s gonna lose. The bottom line is if they stay home or they don’t vote, we’ll get Hillary Clinton."

"I know that he doesn't have the strong conservative practices that I have, but I believe that he understands and that he supports it," said Suzan Weaver, an activist at the conference from Washington.

"His tone, it doesn't offend me," Weaver said.

Not everyone was impressed. Carly Fiorina, who was a frequent and harsh critic of Trump during the primary, told the audience, "We have to win the right way," and seemed to urge them to focus on down-ballot races.

"He's not a constitutionalist. You don't know what he believes in; he says one thing one minute, then he flip-flops. He turns around when they corner him on something and he changes his story," said Juanita Eads, an activist from Florida. "He supports Planned Parenthood."

"He says what he thinks you want to hear," Eads said. "Just like Obama does."

Romney Says He Won't Support Trump, Warns Of "Trickle-Down Racism"

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The 2012 Republican nominee repeatedly slammed Trump, saying he would not vote for him and raising new questions about the candidate’s tax returns.

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CNN

Mitt Romney slammed Donald Trump over and over again Friday, saying he was "disturbed" by the presumptive Republican presidential nominee and doesn't "want to see trickle-down racism."

Romney made the comments during an interview in Park City, Utah, with CNN's Wolf Blitzer. When Blitzer asked Romney — who won Trump's endorsement during his own presidential bid in 2012 — about this year's election, he said flatly he would not support the New York businessman's bid.

"I simply can't put my name down as someone who voted for principles that suggest racism, or xenophobia, misogyny, bigotry, whose been vulgar time and time again," Romney said, later adding "I don't want to see trickle-down racism."

Donald Trump greets Mitt Romney during a news conference Feb. 2, 2012, in Las Vegas.

Julie Jacobson / AP

Romney singled out Trump's comments about Judge Gonzalo Curiel — who Trump has claimed cannot adjudicate fairly because of his "Mexican heritage" — as indicative of his racism and "what he believes." Romney went on to criticize Trump's temperament, and said the presumptive nominee was not qualified to handle international crises such as those in Syria and Afghanistan.

"I don't think there's anything I'm looking for from Mr. Trump to give him my support," Romney said. "He's demonstrated who he is and I've decided that a person of that nature should not be the one who, if you will, becomes the example for coming generations."


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This Is How Politicians Are Reacting To The Orlando Gay Nightclub Shooting

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Donald Trump said he “appreciate[s] the congrats for being right on radical Islamic terrorism.”

Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

WASHINGTON — In the wake of Sunday's deadly mass-shooting at the Pulse gay nightclub in Orlando, Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump tweeted that the shooting was a sign he was "right on radical Islamic terrorism."

The shooting, which left 50 dead and more than another 50 injured, took place at a Latin night at the gay club.

Sen. Bill Nelson of Florida said the intelligence community believes the shooter, Omar Mateen, had connections to ISIS.


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Filmmaker Ken Burns Delivers Blistering Takedown Of Donald Trump At Stanford

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The renowned documentary filmmaker offered a lengthy critique of Donald Trump while delivering Stanford’s commencement address on Sunday.

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For 216 years, our elections, though bitterly contested, have featured the philosophies and character of candidates who were clearly qualified. That is not the case this year. One is glaringly not qualified. So before you do anything with your well-earned degree, you must do everything you can to defeat the retrograde forces that have invaded our democratic process, divided our house, to fight against, no matter your political persuasion, the dictatorial tendencies of the candidate with zero experience in the much maligned but subtle art of governance; who is against lots of things, but doesn't seem to be for anything, offering only bombastic and contradictory promises, and terrifying Orwellian statements; a person who easily lies, creating an environment where the truth doesn't seem to matter; who has never demonstrated any interest in anyone or anything but himself and his own enrichment; who insults veterans, threatens a free press, mocks the handicapped, denigrates women, immigrants, and all Muslims; a man who took more than a day to remember to disavow a supporter who advocates white supremacy and the Ku Klux Klan; an infantile, bullying man who, depending on his mood, is willing to discard old and established alliances, treaties, and longstanding relationships. I feel genuine sorrow for the understandably scared and — they feel — powerless people who have flocked to his campaign in the mistaken belief that — as often happens on TV — a wand can be waved and every complicated problem can be solved with the simplest of solutions. They can't. It is a political Ponzi scheme. And asking this man to assume the highest office in the land would be like asking a newly minted car driver to fly a 747.

As a student of history, I recognize this type. He emerges everywhere and in all eras. We see nurtured in his campaign an incipient proto-fascism, a nativist anti-immigrant Know Nothing-ism, a disrespect for the judiciary, the prospect of women losing authority over their own bodies, African-Americans again asked to go to the back of the line, voter suppression gleefully promoted, jingoistic saber-rattling, a total lack of historical awareness, a political paranoia that, predictably, points fingers, always making the other wrong. These are all virulent strains that have at times infected us in the past. But they now loom in front of us again — all happening at once. We know from our history books that these are the diseases of ancient and now fallen empires. The sense of commonwealth, of shared sacrifice, of trust, so much a part of American life, is eroding fast, spurred along and amplified by an amoral internet that permits a lie to circle the globe three times before the truth can get started.

We no longer have the luxury of neutrality or "balance," or even of bemused disdain. Many of our media institutions have largely failed to expose this charlatan, torn between a nagging responsibility to good journalism and the big ratings a media circus always delivers. In fact, they have given him the abundant airtime he so desperately craves, so much so that it has actually worn down our natural human revulsion to this kind of behavior. Hey, he's rich; he must be doing something right. He is not. Edward R. Murrow would have exposed this naked emperor months ago. He is an insult to our history. Do not be deceived by his momentary "good behavior." It is only a spoiled, misbehaving child hoping somehow to still have dessert.

And do not think that the tragedy in Orlando underscores his points. It does not. We must "disenthrall ourselves," as Abraham Lincoln said, from the culture of violence and guns. And then "we shall save our country."

This is not a liberal or conservative issue, a red state–blue state divide. This is an American issue. Many honorable people, including the last two Republican presidents, members of the party of Abraham Lincoln, have declined to support him. And I implore those "Vichy Republicans" who have endorsed him to please, please reconsider. We must remain committed to the kindness and community that are the hallmarks of civilization and reject the troubling, unfiltered Tourette's of his tribalism.

The next few months of your "commencement," that is to say, your future, will be critical to the survival of our republic. "The occasion is piled high with difficulty." Let us pledge here today that we will not let this happen to the exquisite, yet deeply flawed, land we all love and cherish — and hope to leave intact to our posterity. Let us "nobly save," not "meanly lose, the last best hope of earth."

LINK: The full address can be viewed on Stanford's YouTube channel here.


Spokeswoman: Rangel Didn't Meet With Father Of The Orlando Shooter

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Seddique Mateen

The father of the Orlando shooter has a YouTube channel and Facebook page that he used to talk at length about his political beliefs, which included support for the Afghan Taliban.

Seddique Mateen also posted a number of photos to Facebook featuring himself in the halls of Congress, and in posed photos with Reps. Charles Rangel, Dana Rohrabacher, and Ed Royce.

Early Sunday morning, his son, Omar Mateen, killed 50 people in a Florida gay night club and wounded dozens more in a terror attack that is the deadliest mass shooting in U.S. history.

A spokeswoman for Rangel, a New York Democrat, told BuzzFeed News that the congressman was stopped in the hallway for a photo and obliged. There was no formal meeting between Rangel and Mateen, she said.

Rohrabacher, a California Republican, told BuzzFeed News that he did not remember meeting Seddique Mateen, and "probably never saw him again."

But, Rohrabacher said, "It would not surprise me if I had met him if he’s an Afghan activist because I’ve been very active on that issue."

Seddique Mateen

"I have been very deeply involved in numerous activities to try to destroy the Taliban and dealing with various Afghan leaders," Rohrabacher said. "Very few people are paying attention anymore. The fact that I do pay attention does actually bring some of them to my door."

(In videos, the elder Mateen expressed gratitude toward the Taliban, the Washington Post reported on Sunday.)

After checking records, Royce said in a statement that the meeting with Mateen a year and a half ago was "brief and inconsequential." " I routinely meet with Afghan-Americans, and I vaguely recall a discussion about the issue of Afghanistan-Pakistan relations," Royce said.

LINK: 50 Killed At Orlando Gay Nightclub In Deadliest U.S. Mass Shooting

Trump: Romney A "Sad,""Pathetic,""Jealous""Loser" Who Should Retire

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“He’s a jealous guy. He’s got a lot of problems.”

Stan Honda / AFP / Getty Images

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Donald Trump on Monday called Mitt Romney a sad, pathetic loser who should go into retirement. The comments came in an interview on Breitbart News Daily on SiriusXM.

"Romney's a loser. He lost the election badly," said Trump. "He should have won that election. That election was easier than this election. He should have won that election. He choked. He was a choker. And I was very tough on him at the beginning, because we don't want to give a choker, I backed him, but we don't want to give a choker a second chance. We can't afford to. He wasn't going to win anyway. He would have choked the same way. Whatever happened he was way off."

Romney, who has sharply criticized Trump this year, held his annual summit this weekend for Republican leaders at his home in Park City, Utah.

"He lost by a lot," Trump added. "Now he goes around having meetings about Donald Trump. He ought to go into retirement and relax, because he's wasting a lot of people's time."

Trump said Romney was jealous of him.

"He's a very jealous guy," Trump said. "He's got a lot of problems. I watched his statement over the weekend. Actually, it was sort of sad and pathetic at the same time. It was pathetic, but it was sad, too, to watch him."

Trump said he thought Romney felt guilty about losing the election, which he said Romney should have won easily.

Florida's Mini Trump Looks To Be His Own Candidate In Senate Primary

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Casey Brooke Lawson/Carlos Beruff / Via Facebook: carlos.beruff

TAMPA, Fla. — He's a brash, political outsider and a wealthy builder who's largely self-funding a primary campaign with the slogan "Put America First."

But Carlos Beruff, who is polling at the top of a crowded pack of GOP Senate candidates looking to replace Sen. Marco Rubio, is hoping to show he's more than just a mini Donald Trump, as the primary in the Sunshine State heats up. In an election year where the left is looking to capitalize on Trump's offensive comments on down-ballot races, Democrats believe taking on Beruff in the fall would make their road to a majority in the Senate easier.

"Do we have some similarities? Of course," Beruff said about Trump in a brief sit-down over coffee with BuzzFeed News after he attended the GOP presidential nominee's rally in downtown Tampa Saturday morning. "We're both builders — of course he builds big things, I build little houses — but we understand the economy, and we understand what happens when an economy goes bad, because nobody or no industry is more sensitive to the economy than the housing industry.

"Business people — we've got to solve problems. We can't succeed if we don't solve problems. If we don't overcome hurdles and challenges, then guess what? You're not in business very long."

Beruff has called for a travel ban from all Middle Eastern countries except Israel and reiterated Trump's call for a wall along the Southern border. He's also referred to President Obama as an "animal." But he repeatedly insisted that despite his support for Trump and similarities in their background, he's developed his own ideas and proposals after traveling around the state.

"We've been to all 67 counties. I'm running on what I stand for and I hope the voters want that kind of person," he said.

At a time when the electorate seems to be rewarding outsiders, Beruff said if he makes it through the primary, he doesn't think he needs to change his rhetoric — as establishment Republicans are hoping Trump will — for the general election.

"There's no pivoting necessary," he said. "I've always hated the hyphenated American. OK? ... I'm American first. I'm Cuban by descent. I love my heritage. I love my roots. But I'm American first. Everything else is second, so from my perspective, we should change all that. Cuban-Americans should be American-Cubans, African-Americans should be American-Africans.

"I don't care where the hell you come from. American has to be first. And if everybody takes that to heart, then we unite Americans, so part of my thing is 'Put America First.'"

Democrats are already spending millions trying to connect Senate Republican candidates to Trump. Beruff, they believe, will be an easy target.

But he believes his message — although similar to Trump's — is harder to attack because he's an immigrant himself.

"I'm not against immigration," he said. "I'm against people breaking the law and not doing the paperwork or paying taxes, or quite frankly if they're doing anything criminal, they should get the hell out of there.

"What I don't want is a lot of people who come in this country and take advantage of all the good things the country has, but they still want to be wherever they came from. So make up your mind — either be there or be here, because let me tell you something, if you're not sure, you should go back because there's lots of people who really want to be here for the right reasons. OK?"

"Our message is clear," he continued. "I'm not terribly worried. I have an inherent belief that people get it right 90% of the time and all the money in the world doesn't buy you an election. If people don't like you and don't think you're the right guy, then guess what? You ain't gonna get there."

Worried about losing the seat to Democrats, Republicans in recent weeks — including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and the Chamber of Commerce — have urged Rubio to run for re-election. Their concern is that a late, bitter August primary with a nominee with low name ID could hurt them in November. Although Rubio for weeks had maintained that his decision to retire from the Senate had not changed, on Monday, following the shooting in Orlando, he seemed to be reconsidering.

"When (horror) visits your home state, and it impacts a community you know well, it really gives you pause to think a little bit about, you know, your service to your country and where you can be most useful to your country," Rubio said in a radio interview.

But Beruff insisted he wouldn't drop out based on Rubio's decision.

"If Marco runs, I'm staying in the race," he said without hesitation.

"Only time will tell whether it gets tougher or it fragments... Unfortunately, we're not running our campaign on the political establishment in Washington. If we were, I'd give a damn. But I don't. They're not sending me any money. And I don't want it. I'm running on what I stand for and I hope the voters want that kind of person."

Beruff also criticized some establishment Republicans for not giving Donald Trump a full-hearted endorsement. "Some of the people that are running for office, who say, 'We'll support the nominee, but I really...' Give me a break. Make a decision! Live with your decision and take responsibility for the choices that you make."

"I think [Trump's] got the right vision at the end of the day."

Although he is unabashed in sharing his views at campaign events, Beruff has yet to do that on the debate stage against his opponents — which include businessman Todd Wilcox, Reps. Ron DeSantis, and David Jolly, and Lt. Gov. Carlos Lopez Cantera — because he doesn't think it's necessary.

"At this point, I'm the only guy whose got traction. And the only people who are working as hard as we are. Nobody is working as hard as we are," he said.

Selling Trump In Park City

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Scaramucci at the real Davos earlier this year.

Ruben Sprich / Reuters

The toughest guy in Park City this weekend was Anthony Scaramucci, a top Donald Trump fundraiser and his emissary to the anti-Trump resistance.

The compact hedge fund manager, well-cut blue suit, open collar, and the light-on-his-feet prowl of a boxer, had just emerged from a panel discussion at Mitt Romney’s annual conference here. His pitch on stage reportedly boiled down to comparing the Democrats to the White Walkers from Game of Thrones. Guests trickled out of the ballroom and he stood by the glass doors, Wasatch Mountains looming behind him, trying to make the case.

“I’m a team-playing Republican,” he explained, breaking briefly (and with the blessing of a Romney aide) with the conference’s off-the-record rules to speak to me about his mission. “We need to open the tent.”

This is a very hard sell, even for a great salesman. And Scaramucci has some unfortunate history. A big Romney fundraiser, Scaramucci first backed Scott Walker and then Jeb Bush, at one point dismissing Trump as a “hack politician,” objecting to the way he “talks about women,” and calling Trump’s criticism of hedge funds "anti-American.”

Still, Scaramucci, whose bouncy machismo has made him a cable news fixture, is the sort of figure Trump courts. And as we were talking, Republicans — their side of these conversations is off the record — came up to greet the visitor warily.

Scaramucci tried a series of approaches in quick succession.

First, he appealed to wealthy Republicans' concerns about taxes and regulation.

Failing to support Trump “means eight years of a further slouch into socialism,” he told one guest at the conference.

He played to their admiration for another speaker at the event, Paul Ryan.

“That means your speaker, who you love — leaving him behind enemy lines. You're ok with that?” he asked another.

(Ryan, even among friends, reportedly squirmed under difficult questions about his own endorsement of Trump, and faced California Republican Meg Whitman bluntly asking him why he would back a man she compared to Hitler.)

Scaramucci then tried Republican solidarity.

“As a team, we've allowed one person to break up the team,” he said.

And he tried out a play to vanity.

“We need your wisdom,” he told a skeptical Republican, suggesting Trump would like his advice.

Then Scaramucci tried a harder sell.

“Let me ask you one other question,” he said. “What if he wins?”

“Do you want Sean ‘Puffy’ Combs to be the secretary of state and Gary Busey to be on the Supreme Court?”

This, Scaramucci suggested, is what Republicans can expect if they don’t get on the Trump Train now. (Combs and Busey — who Trump fired in 2013 on Celebrity Apprentice — support Trump. However, the candidate's actual appeal to Republicans is how very very responsible he will be about Supreme Court appointments.)

“Everybody should oppose him, he wins anyway, and he should open the tent?” he asked, shaking his head.

Trump, Scaramucci did finally acknowledge, is Trump.

“I didn't say he was going to change. I don't think that,” Scaramucci said. “But what about bringing in super smart people?”

Romney’s annual conference was, in 2015, an important cattle call for the major Republican candidates. I was invited this year to talk to the audience — a rough approximation of Romney’s donor network — about BuzzFeed and changing media, and found myself in the awkward position of being in the room for Ryan’s talk and others, but unable to report on them.

In private conversations, some of Romney’s loyalists still pine for him to run — but “that ship has sailed,” a top aide said, something Romney himself confirmed in an interview with Wolf Blitzer at CNN. So the mood, when it comes to Trump, was resignation: He will lead the ticket in November.

Still, Romney has found a kind of passion and commitment in his opposition to Trump that, in some ways, never came through in his own campaigns. Two of the assembled Republicans told me they’d vote for Hillary Clinton. Others said, like Romney, that they wouldn’t vote. Some, certainly, will support Trump, and the real question is whether the defections of Regular Republicans are a pure phenomenon of the 1% and the #NeverTrump Twitter crowd, or whether there are real votes there.

There are, surely, real dollars there, which is why Scaramucci was in town. Romney’s fundraising network, which he has transferred in part to Ryan, is massive and formidable and he’s not sharing it. It’s unclear whether Trump will be able to keep up with Clinton on the billion dollar campaign tab — though it’s also unclear whether he needs to.

Scaramucci, though, wasn’t giving up. I asked him where he thought the people in Park City would be come November.

“They'll come around before the end,” he said with a kind of grim determination.

GOP Congressman: I Agree With Clinton That Trump's Comments On Islam Are Harmful

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“I don’t like to agree with Hillary Clinton, but I think she’s right in that you can’t demonize an entire religion,” said Rep. Adam Kinzinger.

Jason Reed / Reuters

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Republican Rep. Adam Kinzinger from Illinois says he disagrees with Donald Trump's proposal to ban Muslim immigration to the United States and agrees with Hillary Clinton in her assessment that you can't demonize all of Islam.

Asked on the Big John Howell Show on WLS AM890 about Trump's proposed ban, Kinzinger said, "I think that does more harm than good, we have a rich history in this country of being welcoming of all religion and class."

"In fact, the First Amendment guarantees that," he continued. "What you do, and I just recently got back from the Middle East, they're more concerned with his statements in terms of their ability to fight the War on Terror."

The congressman said it was Muslims in communities in the United States who would find people who were radicalizing. He said putting tensions between non-Muslims and Muslims would only worsen the problem.

"This is a billion-and-a-half people in the world who prescribe this religion," said Kinzinger. "To just simply say ban them all — I think frankly does more harm — it may work for political season and it does, maybe it's a popular soundbite. But, it is very detrimental to our longterm ability to actually win this war."

The congressman, asked about claims by Hillary Clinton Trump's rhetoric played into ISIS' hands, said she agreed with Clinton.

"I don't know if playing into his hands is the right way to put that, cause that's putting some of this on Trump and this is only the people that do it, but it don't think it's positive to winning this," said Kinzinger. "I don't like to agree with Hillary Clinton, but I think she's right in that you can't demonize an entire religion."

Clinton: How We Respond To Orlando Says Something About America

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Angelo Merendino / Getty Images

CLEVELAND — Hillary Clinton planned to kick off her general election campaign here on Monday “under very different circumstances.”

“But today,” she said, “is not a day for politics.”

Instead, at her first event in a battleground state since becoming the presumptive Democratic nominee, Clinton scrapped a speech directed squarely at Donald Trump and spoke in somber and measured terms about the terrorist attack that left 49 dead late Saturday night at a gay nightclub in Orlando — a tragedy that marked the worst shooting in U.S. history.

The contrast, however, between the two candidates on Monday meant the speech may as well have been about Trump. “This is a moment when all Americans need to stand together,” Clinton said, reading slowly from a pair of teleprompters. “No matter how many times we endure attacks like this, the horror never fades. The murder of innocent people breaks our hearts, tears at our sense of security, and makes us furious.”

“Now we have to steel our resolve to respond. And that’s what I want to talk to you about: how we respond.”

Clinton laid out broad plans for combating ISIS abroad and online, addressed “the threat of lone wolves” like Orlando shooter Omar Mateen, and ticked off the slate of aggressive gun restrictions she’s already proposed on the trail this year.

Clinton promised a “ramped up” air campaign against the Islamic group and an “intelligence surge.” Over the past year, Clinton has argued that European countries need to take a more robust approach toward terror and intelligence sharing. On Monday, she vowed that the “lone wolf” attacks seen in Orlando, San Bernardino, and Boston — a development that ISIS has encouraged and codified — would be a priority as president.

“We face a twisted ideology and poisoned psychology that inspires the so-called lone wolves,” without formal organization, Clinton said. ”As president, I will make identifying and stopping lone wolves a top priority."

Clinton said she would bring together a group of government and private sector officials with community leaders to head the “lone wolf” effort, though she did not elaborate on how to combat the threat specifically.

Clinton also noted that FBI officials had interviewed Mateen, the shooter, on multiple occasions in the last three years — a fact, she said, that should have prevented a gun purchase.

“If the FBI is watching you for suspected terrorist links, you shouldn’t be able to just go buy a gun with no questions asked," Clinton argued.

Law enforcement officials say Mateen carried a handgun and a long gun in the style of an AR-15 rifle, the semi-automatic weapon used in the San Bernardino shooting late last year, as well as the 2013 shootings in Aurora, Colo., and Newtown, Conn. The gun would likely be a target of Democrats’ proposed weapons ban. “That may not stop every shooting or every terrorist attack,” Clinton said. “But it will stop some, and it will save lives.”

Clinton’s 30-minute address was also an appeal to the values that have guided the country through what she described as “the darkest chapters of our history.” Trump, his rhetoric and his proposals, ran like an undercurrent through Clinton’s speech.

“Our open diverse society is an asset in the struggle against terrorism, not a liability. It makes us stronger and more resistant to radicalization,” Clinton said. (An hour later, in a speech in New Hampshire, Trump again called for restricting immigration from Muslim countries, despite the Orlando shooter’s U.S. birth.)

How we choose to respond to events like Orlando, Clinton argued, raises “a larger point about the future of our country,” emphasizing American unity and equality.

She addressed directly the LGBT community, likening the events on Sunday to a long line of violence perpetrated against people because they were LGBT — “from Stonewall to Laramie and now Orlando,” Clinton said.

“I want to say this to all the LGBT grieving today in Florida and across our country. You have millions of allies who will always have your back — and I am one of them,” Clinton said. “We have to stand together, be proud together. There is no better rebuke to the terrorists and all those who hate.”

Hours before arriving in Cleveland, Clinton called into four morning news shows to address the Orlando shooting and respond to what she called Trump’s “quite dangerous” rhetoric. In her speech, she alluded specifically to his “inflammatory anti-Muslim rhetoric” and proposed ban on Muslims, arguing such talk would only erode trust abroad and make U.S. law enforcement’s job more difficult.

That remark seemed directed toward Trump’s tweets congratulating himself on predicting another terrorist attack.

“This has always been a country of ‘we,’ not ‘me,’” Clinton said, citing the phrase on the U.S. seal. ‘E pluribus unum — ‘out of many, one’ — has seen us through the darkest chapters of our history.”

She portrayed the American experience as a struggle through dark times, but also a continuum of expanded progress, from ending slavery, to expanding the vote, to opening up access to education.

The “spirit” of the recovery from the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, Clinton said, should serve as the country’s roadmap in the wake of Orlando — and in this year’s election.

“I remember how it felt on the day after 9/11. I bet many of you do as well,” she said. “Americans from all walks of life rallied together with a sense common purpose on Sept. 12, And in the days and weeks and months that followed. We had each other’s backs.”

Clinton, then a U.S. senator from New York, recalled Democrats’ shared sense of purpose with the country’s Republican president and New York’s Republican governor and Republican mayor.

“We did not attack each other. We worked with each other to protect our country and to rebuild our city,” Clinton said. “It is time to get back to the spirit of those days — the spirit of 9/12. Let’s make sure we keep looking to the best of our country, to the best within each of us. Democratic and Republican presidents have risen to the occasion in the face of tragedy.”

“That is what we are called to do.”

Trump: People Can Figure Out What I Meant By My Comments On Obama And Radical Islam

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“I’ll let people figure that out for themselves.”

Aaron Josefczyk / Reuters

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Donald Trump said people can figure out for themselves what he meant when he said Monday morning that "there's something going on" when President Obama talks about Islamic terrorism.

"Well, you know, I'll let people figure that out for themselves, Howie," Trump said on The Howie Carr Show. "'Cause, to be honest with you, there certainly doesn't seem to be a lot anger or passion when he — when we want to demand retribution for what happened over the weekend."

"There was certainly not a lot of passion," continued Trump. "There was certainly not a lot of anger. You know, I'll let that, we'll let people figure it out. But it's very, very, it's a very sad situation when we have the kind of a tragedy that we had and we have a president that gave a press conference and talks about gun control. This was a licensed person, who could have had a gun anyway."

Earlier in the interview, Trump said President Obama was angrier with him than he was at ISIS.

In an interview with Fox News Monday morning, Trump said, "Look, we're led by a man that either is not tough, not smart, or he's got something else in mind. And the something else in mind — you know, people can't believe it. People cannot, they cannot believe that President Obama is acting the way he acts and can't even mention the words 'radical Islamic terrorism.' There's something going on. It's inconceivable. There's something going on."

Trump also said on Today: "There are a lot of people who think maybe he doesn't want to get it. A lot of people think maybe he doesn't want to know about it."

On his Facebook page on Monday afternoon, Trump said it was "dishonest" for the Washington Post to write that he suggested Obama was involved with the Orlando shooting:

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Podcast: What We Do And Don't Know About Anti-LGBT Violence In America

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Mandel Ngan / AFP / Getty Images

What do we know about anti-LGBT violence in America?

The full details of the Orlando shooting at a gay nightclub have yet to emerge, and they've already raised questions about terrorism, hate crimes, and mass shootings.

But the incident has helped surface the issue of anti-LGBT violence and how little data there actually is about the subject.

On a mini-episode of No One Knows Anything, BuzzFeed's politics podcast, legal editor Chris Geidner spoke about hate crimes, statistics, and helping police to identify crimes that single out the LGBT community.

Listen to this episode of No One Knows Anything and subscribe on iTunes.

Trump Repeats False Claim That Muslims Knew In Advance Of San Bernardino Shooting

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There’s no evidence to support this claim.

Scott Audette / Reuters

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Donald Trump on Monday repeated the false claim that the Muslim community in San Bernardino, California, knew but declined to report that a couple had bombs all over their apartment floor in preparation for an attack.

Trump, appearing on the Wayne Dupree Show, said, "One of the problems we have is the people in the community, the Muslim community are not turning over the sickos. "They're not turning over the people – and they know they are. If you look at San Bernardino as an example, San Bernardino, they had bombs all over the floor of their apartment. And everybody knew it, many people knew it. They didn't turn the people over. They didn't do it."

BuzzFeed News explored Trump's claim back in March — when he repeatedly made it at his rallies and on television — and found no evidence to support it. From the report:

Reports that neighbors saw suspicious activity at the Redlands home of Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik, the radicalized couple behind the attack, but did nothing to stop it has been repeated in conservative media since the December assault, often arguing that political correctness and fear of racial profiling allowed the attack to happen.

Those news reports all appear to stem from local media interviews with an unnamed man who said he was working in the neighborhood, and another man who was visiting the area and relaying, second-hand, a story from a neighbor. Neither mentioned "bombs" or any objects "on the floor."

In the interview on Monday, Trump said "we're going to have to do something" about Muslims not turning in "bad seeds," but did not specify what he meant.

"So we have a real problem, and it has start, and it has to stop with the Muslim community, turning in the bad seeds, turning in the bad apples. And if they don't do that, then we're gonna have to do something because we can't live like this," Trump said . "I mean, we can't have this happening."

Later, Trump said he believes there's a "great hatred" in Islam.

"We just have to do something about it," Trump said of radical Islamism. "It's so prevalent and it is so deep. It's so deeply seated. I mean, this is going on for hundreds of years. The hatred. There's a great hate there. You know they used to say, 'no, it's a religion of love.' Well, I'll tell you what, it's awfully hard to explain to the people in Orlando that that's a religion of love. There's a great hatred there beyond anything that I've ever seen. And it's so deep seated. And we have to get it stopped. It's something that we shouldn't have to live with."


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Clinton Calls Trump's Insinuation About Obama And Terrorism “Shameful”

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Andrew Harnik / AP

PITTSBURGH, Pa. — Hillary Clinton assailed Donald Trump for his “shameful,” “disrespectful” suggestion after the terrorist attack in Orlando, the deadliest shooting in U.S. history, that President Obama sympathized with terrorists.

“Just one day after the massacre, he went on TV and suggested that President Obama is on the side of the terrorists. Now, just think about that for a second,” Clinton told the crowd here in a packed Pittsburgh union hall, standing behind a newly designed campaign placard that read, “STRONGER TOGETHER."

“Even in a time of divided politics," Clinton said, "this is way beyond anything that should be said by someone running for president of the United States."

“What Donald Trump is saying is shameful.”

The presumptive GOP nominee made the suggestion in two interviews the morning after 49 were pronounced dead at the hands of an American-born terrorist.

On the TODAY show, Trump said many people believe Obama doesn’t “get” the threat posed by ISIS, then added: “A lot of people think maybe he doesn’t want to know about it.” In a separate appearance on Fox News, he floated vague theories about whether Obama has “got something else in mind” when it comes to terrorism: “There’s something going on. It’s inconceivable. There’s something going on.”

Although he dismissed news articles on the comments as “dishonest,” Trump did not deny the implication later on Monday in an interview with the Howie Carr Show. “Well,” he only said, “I’ll let people figure that out for themselves.”

At Tuesday's campaign event, invoking the weight of what “history will remember,” Clinton challenged Republicans to disavow Trump’s statements about Obama.

“I have to ask,” she said, "will responsible Republican leaders stand up to their presumptive nominee, or will they stand by his accusation about our president? Now I am sure they’d rather avoid that question altogether. But history will remember what we do in this moment.”

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The speech here in Pittsburgh marked Clinton’s second visit to a battleground state since she became the presumptive nominee. Campaign officials initially intended the focus of the event to be on the candidate's economic proposals and her support for the labor community — but after the tragedy in Orlando over the weekend, Clinton's swing through Ohio and Pennsylvania this week took a somber turn.

On Monday, Clinton delivered a measured response to the shooting, emphasizing gun control and her plans for combating ISIS, with no mention of Trump by name.

Her speech here, however, came as a full-scale rebuttal to the GOP nominee and his inflammatory remarks and false statements in the days after Orlando.

She dismissed his campaign as full of “conspiracy theories” and “pathological self-congratulations,” and tore through the national security address he delivered on Monday in New Hampshire as filled with “bizarre rants” and “outright lies.”

Clinton also reminded voters that Trump led the birther movement against Obama (“I guess he had to be reminded Hawaii is part of the United States”), and more recently cast doubt on an Indiana-born federal judge because of his Mexican heritage (“I guess he has to be reminded Indiana is in the United States”).

Clinton, whose aides have said she will attempt to fill the role of “unifier” against Trump, concluded her remarks here by reading from the letter that George H.W. Bush left for her husband as he left the presidency on Jan. 20, 1993.

Last week, the letter resurfaced online, shared by hundreds of thousands as a token of the country’s shared values and a bygone spirit of bipartisanship. The Bush family has opted to sit out this year's general election, declining to endorse Trump.

“I hadn’t read it in a long time — until yesterday,” Clinton said.

“It moved me to tears, just like it did all those years ago.”

“They had just fought a fierce campaign. Bill won, President Bush lost. In a democracy, that’s how it goes. But when Bill walked into that office for the very first time as president, that note was waiting for him," Clinton said, before reciting the letter's last lines.

You will be our president when you read this note. I wish you well. I wish your family well. Your success is now our country’s success. I am rooting hard for you.

"That’s the America we love,” Clinton said.

George Bush Presidential Library and Museum


Democrats Are Bringing Back Their Terror Watch List Gun Control Bill

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Win Mcnamee / Getty Images


WASHINGTON — In the wake of the largest mass shooting in modern history and growing concerns among Republicans about their chances to retain the majority, Senate Democrats are hopeful that this time they will have enough support to keep those on the terror watch list from legally purchasing firearms.

Following the terrorist attack in Orlando, Democrats are pushing previously failed legislation proposed by California Sen. Dianne Feinstein and putting pressure on Republicans facing tough re-elections to reconsider the proposal. At least one Republican — Illinois Sen. Mark Kirk, the Republican most at risk of losing his seat — told reporters Tuesday he would support the measure and is hopeful his Republican colleagues would join in. Kirk was the only Republican to vote for the amendment when it was introduced at the end of last year.

But other senators in battleground Senate races also said they were open to voting for a measure addressing the issue and pushed for a compromise between Feinstein's measure and one offered by Republican Sen. John Cornyn — which Republicans voted for last year. The Texas Republican's legislation would give the attorney general or U.S. attorney in the district 72 hours to delay those on the terror watch list from buying a gun. It would ban the person permanently from from buying a gun, if the attorney can show that there was probable cause.

"We all voted to prevent that from happening while also giving citizens due process, and so hopefully we can come to a foundation to prevent that. I mean that's something we all agree on," Wisconsin Sen. Ron Johnson told reporters, adding that the GOP conference had a "robust discussion on this" during their weekly lunch.

Johnson said he was in favor of "some kind of compromise that actually accomplishes the task while protecting Americans' constitutional rights and due process. We all realize that there is some problem with those lists — they're secret. No one knows how you get on and the process for getting out."

About 800,000 names are believed to be on this list, which is not released publicly.

New Hampshire Sen. Kelly Ayotte, one of those Republicans in a deadlocked re-election race, also said she was open to coming to a compromise. "I've previously supported legislation that would address those on the terror watch list from having firearms," she said, pointing to the Cornyn amendment. "I would be open to working together to address that, but Sen. Feinstein's bill is very broad and doesn't have sufficient due process protections."

Another vulnerable Republican, Ohio Sen. Rob Portman, said he would take a look once again at the Democrats' proposal, which he voted against last year. "It would be great if we could make that bipartisan this year... We should be able to get it done," he said.

The comments from Republicans come as Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid has repeatedly attacked inaction in Congress in floor speeches, accusing Republicans of siding with the gun lobby over the safety of their constituents. He specifically pointed to Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, who appears to be reconsidering retirement, for not supporting any gun control bills.

"How can these Republicans campaign for re-election in good conscience knowing that they voted to block every sensible bill to address gun violence?" Reid said Monday. "For example, how can the junior senator from Florida, who all of a sudden is again interested in running for re-election, how can he speak of running for office again when he voted to let potential terrorists buy assault weapons and explosives... He was quoted as saying with what happened yesterday, I might reconsider. Better reconsider his gun votes."

Although Orlando shooter Omar Mateen had been removed from the watch list, a provision in Feinstein's bill, which allowed the attorney general to prevent a suspected terrorist not on the list from buying a gun, might have prevented the purchase.

On Tuesday, Feinstein said she was going to talk to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell about putting her measure up for a vote and was also and open to a compromise with Cornyn. "I think the time has come that whatever your philosophy, mentality, or belief is on guns, you certainly don't want guns to fall in the hands of terrorists."

When asked why she thought this time there was a greater chance for passage, Feinstein responded: "Life and death — that's the reason," she said. "This is the biggest ever shooting."

Connecticut Sen. Richard Blumenthal argued that a "tipping point" had been reached on the issue given last weekend's shooting. "I've talked to a number of (Republicans) and they are thinking about it," he said without giving specific names. "The possibility of error shouldn't doom the possibility of a terror watch list."

Even if the effort fails this time, New York Sen. Chuck Schumer stressed the Democratic caucus would bring up the issue over and over again.

"Can we win? We'll win sooner or later," he said. "We'll keep trying. We're not giving up. Every time we have a vote, hopefully they'll change their mind out there, but if not, then they face the consequences, and that means progress moving forward."


Bill Clinton Says Foundation Will See Changes If Hillary Clinton's Elected

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Clinton campaigning earlier this month for his wife in California.

David Mcnew / Getty Images

Bill Clinton said Tuesday he would make "some changes" to the Clinton Foundation should his wife become president, so as to avoid "potential conflicts.”

In his first interview in more than eight months, the former president told Bloomberg TV that he and his wife would ensure that the foundation would be able continue its work without benefiting from or interfering with the White House.

“If she wins, we’ll have to think about it. There are clearly — politics is different from what I do,” Bill Clinton said in the interview, held in Atlanta as part of “CGI America,” an annual Clinton Global Initiative event. “You have to be careful to avoid actual potential conflicts."

“We’ll think very clearly about it, and we’ll do the right thing,” he said, “and explain it to the american people.”

Clinton said he and his wife, who effectively secured the Democratic nomination last Tuesday, would hold off for now on laying out what those changes would entail.

“First, I don't believe in counting your chickens before they hatch,” he said. “Let’s see how this election unfolds. There will clearly be some changes and what the Clinton Foundation does and how we do it.”

“And we’ll have to cross that bridge when we come to it.”

For the four years that Hillary Clinton served as secretary of state, the foundation agreed to certain restrictions to avoid conflicts of interest or the appearance of influence. Last year, officials disclosed that the foundation had continued to accept funding from foreign governments during Hillary Clinton’s State Department tenure, including one donation in apparent violation of the agreement with the Obama administration.

Questions about the foundation, and the nexus of power, money, and influence that surrounds the former first couple, have already weighed on Clinton’s campaign this year.

Donald Trump has repeatedly seized on the Clinton Foundation, characterizing the family initiative as scandal-plagued and its connections as unsavory.

On Monday, in a post on Facebook, he called on the Clintons to “immediately return” donations from Saudi Arabia. Since its founding, the foundation has accepted $10 to $25 million from the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, according to the Wall Street Journal.

On Tuesday, Bill Clinton described the work of the foundation in simple terms: "I just try to get partners together and make something good happen."

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