Donald Trump's new hires will reinforce campaign's worst impulses
Trump's new hires bring little by way of national election experience to the campaign, and that's the point.
Paul McGeough is chief foreign correspondent for the Sydney Morning Herald.
Trump's new hires bring little by way of national election experience to the campaign, and that's the point.
Hillary Clinton may be ahead in the race for the White House. But she is still seen by many Americans as a distasteful choice.
Trump's ''new approach'' to halt the spread of Islam
In standing by a decades-old tradition and offering to make his tax affairs public, Mike Pence has left Donald Trump acting as though he has heaps to hide.
An emboldened Hillary Clinton piles pressure on the beleaguered Republican presidential nominee.
'It's the economy, stupid' was the slogan behind Bill Clinton's 1992 White House triumph; but in Campaign 2016 it's becoming more about stupid – and his name is Donald Trump.
Polls say that for each Democrat voter who shifts to Trump, two Republicans are getting behind Clinton, raising a real possibility of a wave of Clinton Republicans.
It was a sinister moment in a campaign already replete with ugliness. And it put the spotlight back on Donald Trump.
Trump's seemingly reckless words provoked this warning from a former CIA director.
Donald Trump reiterates his criticism of NAFTA and TPP trade deals and even says "we'll put our coal miners and our steel workers back to work".
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