On US Election update; The Note: The Trump Papers
NOTABLES
--DOCUMENT DUMP: The Clinton Presidential Library today
is releasing nearly 500 pages of documents related to Donald Trump and
the Trump Organization following a Freedom of Information Act request,
according to the National Archives. The trove of documents include
Trump’s invitations to White House events, a photo of Clinton and Trump
at Trump Towers, and an autographed copy of Trump's book “The Art of the
Deal,” ABC’s VERONICA STRACQUALURSI notes. Also
included among the documents are emails and “briefing materials for
press events that include media questions” about when Trump was teasing a
run for the presidency in 2000.
--MEET THE MAN TASKED WITH GETTING TRUMP THE REPUBLICAN NOMINATION: Paul
Manafort has been added to the Trump team as the campaign’s convention
manager, showing that the real estate magnate-turned-reality star-turned
politician is grappling with the inner workings of a possible contested
convention. Unlike much of Trump's relatively young staff that helped
the Republican front-runner earn his early primary victories, Manafort
is arguably more of an establishment figure.
--ANALYSIS -- ABC’s RICK KLEIN: Donald Trump is railing
against a “rigged” and “disgusting” “crooked, crooked system,” and even
posted a video of a supporter burning his Republican Party ID card. So
that’s one way to campaign. The other might be to learn – and learn to
play by – the rules of delegate selection, as byzantine as they are.
That doesn’t appear to be the Trump way, in fitting with a campaign
that’s emphasized bluster over organizing, and has built up the
so-called “establishment” as a useful foil. It’s a tactic designed to
keep his base energized – but that’s not now, and never has been,
Trump’s problem. Arguing about a rigged game to the people who will
decide it – the delegates themselves – is like trying to convince an
umpire that he’s in the tank for the other side. There’s still a chance
that none of this matters, if Trump picks up enough delegates in New
York and beyond. But if Trump falls short of 1,237, it’s hard to see
Trump’s argument carrying the day among the assembled delegates in
Cleveland.
YESTERDAY ON THE TRAIL with ABC’s VERONICA STRACQUALURSI and PAOLA CHAVEZ
WHAT SANDERS’ STRING OF WINS MEANS FOR CLINTON IN NEW YORK. Sen.
Bernie Sanders' string of recent victories could mean the New York
primary may be the most important contest yet for the Democrats. Sanders
has won seven of the last eight nominating contests, which experts say
could lead to issues for front-runner Hillary Clinton. "If she can hold
the superdelegates,
she'll coast -- or maybe limp -- to the nomination," James Campbell, a
professor of political science at the University at Buffalo, told ABC
News. "The question is if this is putting pressure on the superdelegates
to rethink their support for Clinton," he added.
NOTED: SANDERS PROPOSES NATIONAL BAN ON FRACKING. Sanders
has a new addition to his campaign speech. Speaking to crowds around
New York state and Pennsylvania in the last week, the progressive
Democratic candidate has ratcheted up his focus on environmental issues,
specifically talking at length about his opposition to fracking. Last
fall, Sanders introduced during sweeping legislation to ban the extract
of any fossil fuels on federal lands, but in Binghamton, New York on
Monday, the Vermont senator went even further, proposing a national ban
on the controversial natural shale gas extraction technology, ABC’s MARYALICE PARKS reports
BIDEN ‘WOULD LIKE TO SEE A WOMAN ELECTED’ PRESIDENT. Vice
President Joe Biden is refraining from endorsing a candidate in the
2016 race, but in an interview with Mic, the vice president said he's
ready to see a women elected president, according to ABC’s ARLETTE SAENZ.
"This country's ready for a woman. There's no problem. We're going to
be able to elect a woman in this country," Biden said. Asked if he would
like to see a woman elected, Biden replied, "I would like to see a
woman elected." An aide to Biden quickly chimed in, saying, "That's it,"
but the vice president elaborated, explaining that he will not offer an
endorsement in the 2016 race.
KASICH DODGES QUESTION ON ‘CONVERSION THERAPY.’ Republican
hopeful John Kasich answered a question about "conversion therapy" at a
campaign event in Troy, New York, Monday by instead switching the topic
to gay marriage and anti-discrimination laws, irritating his
questioner, who said she didn’t ask about “gay marriage and wedding
cakes.” Kasich also said yesterday afternoon that he had not heard of
the case of Leelah Alcorn, a transgender teen who attracted national
attention when she killed herself in 2014 in Ohio, where Kasich took
office as governor in 2011. Alcorn, a 17-year-old who was subjected to
"conversion therapy," wrote a suicide note about her difficulties
growing up transgender; her case prompted the White House to call for an
end to the use of the technique, which aims to try to change a person's
gender identity or sexual orientation, on minors. ABC’s BEN GITTLESON has more.
NOTED: KASICH ON REFUSING SERVICE TO LGBT PEOPLE: ‘WHAT THE HELL ARE WE DOING IN THIS COUNTRY?’
Kasich asked Monday night “what the hell” was happening in the United
States that a state would allow businesses to deny service to people who
are gay or transgender, as a law Mississippi’s governor signed last
week permits. "I read about this thing they did in Mississippi, where
apparently you can deny somebody service because they're gay?" Kasich
said during a town hall televised on CNN, where appeared with his wife
and twin 16-year-old daughters. "What the hell are we doing in this
country? I mean, look, I may not appreciate a certain lifestyle or even
approve of it, but I can -- it doesn't mean I've got to go write a law
and try to figure out how to have another wedge issue.” http://abcn.ws/1Vj7jRB
WHAT’S INSIDE THE CONTROVERSIAL 1994 CRIME BILL THAT’S PLAGUING HILLARY CLINTON ON THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL.
One of the latest flash points in the Democratic presidential race is a
crime bill signed into law more than two decades ago. The Violent Crime
Control and Law Enforcement Act, passed by then-President Bill Clinton
in 1994, has caused outbursts from protesters and is bringing his time
in the White House under scrutiny. Last week, Clinton clashed with
protesters from the Black Lives Matter movement, defending the tough
law.
TRUMP SAYS CRUZ GOT HIS ‘A-- KICKED’ IN LOUISIANA, BUT TOOK DELEGATES. Speaking
to a crowd of thousands last night, Trump slammed the presidential
primary process, calling it a “crooked system." He invoked the Louisiana
GOP primary, in which Trump won the popular vote but tied with rival
Sen. Ted Cruz for delegates, according to ABC’s JOHN SANTUCCI and CANDACE SMITH.
"I end up winning Louisiana and then when everything is done I find out
I get less delegates than this guy that got his a-- kicked, OK? Give me
a break. Really disgust[s] me. So it's a very sick system,” he said.
Trump continued his tirade by invoking another state in which he lost a
delegate battle; Colorado. Cruz got all 34 delegates in that state
without a popular vote, although delegates themselves were voted on. "So
we have a rigged system,” Trump began. "It's a fix.”
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT
DE BLASIO FACES CRITICISM FOR JOKING ABOUT ‘CP TIME’ WITH HILLARY CLINTON.
New York Mayor Bill de Blasio is facing some criticism for joking about
"CP time" while performing in a comedic sketch alongside Hillary
Clinton at a charity event over the weekend. During Inner Circle's
annual event in New York City that includes musical and comedy
performances by local politicians and reporters, Clinton made a surprise
cameo during a scripted scene with de Blasio and Leslie Odom Jr., who
plays Aaron Burr in the Broadway show “Hamilton,” ABC’s LIZ KREUTZ
notes. Clinton joked with de Blasio about how long it took him to
endorse her for president, to which the New York City mayor (and
Clinton's former Senate campaign manager) quipped back, “Sorry, Hillary.
I was running on CP time." The remark is an apparent reference to
colored people time -- a phrase sometimes used as a stereotypical
reference to black people supposedly being late to everything. "During
an evening of satire, the only person this comment was meant to mock was
the mayor," de Blasio's office said in a statement. "Certainly no one
intended to offend anyone."
News source : ABCN
On US Election update; The Note: The Trump Papers
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