President Obama delivers a fiery speech, urging black voters to support Hillary Clinton.
- Clinton is holding on to a lead in the key state of Pennsylvania, a new poll shows
- Donald Trump says Clinton wants to âabolishâ the border, another falsehood by the GOP nominee
- A letter from Mike Penceâs doctor gives him a clean bill of health
- Trump tried to end the âbirtherâ talk about Obama last week, but he has had a lot to say over the years about where the president was born
Surprise cameo at the Emmys: Jeb!
Trumpâs âbirtherâ falsehoods continue to roil the presidential race
Donald Trumpâs acknowledgment on Friday that President Obama was born in the United States has not made the controversy over Trumpâs long advocacy of âbirtherâ falsehoods go away.
The issue continued to ricochet across the campaign debate on Sunday, despite Republican efforts to insist that Trump had now put a close to that chapter. (Obama released his certificate of live birth from Hawaii in 2008 and his long-form birth certificate in 2011, but Trump continued for years to question his origins.)
Obama joked about Trumpâs admission in a speech Saturday night: âIn other breaking news, the world is round, not flat,â he said.
The Democratic vice presidential nominee, Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia, characterized Trumpâs earlier questioning of Obamaâs citizenship as a âbigoted lie.â
His Republican counterpart, Gov. Mike Pence of Indiana, however, followed Trumpâs lead by pressing a new untrue statement â that the birther debate could be traced to Hillary Clintonâs 2008 campaign.
Pence maintained on âABC This Weekâ that Trump had accepted Obamaâs being born in the U.S. âwithout hesitation.â
ABCâs Martha Raddatz pointed out that as recently as last Wednesday, Trump had not been willing to say Obama was born in the U.S. Overall, ABC counted 67 tweets and retweets from Trump questioning where the president was born, she said.
âHe has been a leader in this birther movement,â she said.
Pence responded by alluding to ânews reportsâ tying the birther movement to the 2008 Clinton campaign.
âYou believe that?â she asked.
âLook, Iâll let the facts speak for themselves,â Pence said.
Thereâs no evidence that Clinton ever questioned Obamaâs birthplace during the 2008 campaign or after. As the Trump campaign recently noted, Clinton fired a staff member in Iowa during the 2008 campaign for circulating an email involving the subject.
A senior advisor, Mark Penn, the campaign pollster, wrote a memo at one point suggesting that Clinton should question Obamaâs American values, but did not mention any question of his birthplace.
Kaine, speaking on âThis Week,â said the birther allegations recalled a time when no African American, free or slave, could become a U.S. citizen.
âThis isnât just a semantical thing,â Kaine said. âThis is so painful to so many Americans because they remember our history.â
He said he hoped someone would ask Trump whether he had been âgullibleâ or âconspiratorialâ when âdragging us back to the most painful chapter in American life.â
âWho were you trying to appease by doing that?â he asked.
Asked why it took Trump five years to admit that he had promoted a false story, his campaign manager, Kellyanne Conway, demurred.
âYouâre going to have to ask him,â she said, on CBSâs âFace the Nation.â
âI think this is a side show now the media seems obsessed with,â she added. âHe does things on his terms, on his timeline.â
Rep. John Lewis, a Georgia Democrat and veteran of the civil rights movement, called the matter âshameful.â
âEverybody, every reasonable person knew that he was born in Americaâin Hawaii, not in Kenya,â Lewis said on âFace the Nation.â
Trump âjust wouldnât give up on it,â he said.
âWhen you make mistakes, when youâre wrong, you should admit youâre wrong, and ask people to forgive you,â Lewis added.
Obama belittled Trump over the issue in his remarks Saturday night at a Congressional Black Caucus Foundation dinner in Washington.
âTo think that with just 124 days to go, under the wire, we got that resolved,â Obama said. âI mean, thatâs a boost for me in the home stretch. In other breaking news, the world is round, not flat.â
This post was updated with additional quotes from Conway and Rep. Lewis.
Trump is, at the least, âreckless about violence,â Tim Kaine says
Hillary Clintonâs running mate, Sen. Tim Kaine, said Sunday he was âstunnedâ by Donald Trumpâs remark Friday that her security detail should disarm, and âletâs see what happens to her.â
At a rally Friday, the GOP nominee said that because of Clintonâs support for some gun control measures, her Secret Service bodyguards shouldnât have guns.
Kaine, a Democratic senator from Virginia, said Trump âis using language that is an incitement to violence or an encouragement of violence ... or at least is being kind of cavalier and reckless about violence.â
âAnd that has no place in any election, especially an election to be commander in chief of this country,â he said.
Appearing on âFox News Sunday,â Kaine said that he and Clinton support the 2nd Amendment and gun-safety rules.
Trumpâs running mate, Mike Pence, rushed to defend his candidate.
âI think what Donald Trump was saying is if Hillary Clinton didnât have all that security sheâd probably be a whole lot more supportive of the 2nd Amendment,â Pence said to Martha Raddatz on ABCâs âThis Week with George Stephanopoulos.â
Raddatz said whether intended or not, Trumpâs words sounded like a threat or an encouragement of violence.
âThatâs absolute nonsense,â Pence replied.
Explosion near race course in New Jersey was terrorism, Gov. Christie says
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie said Sunday that a pipe bomb explosion before a Marine charity race in his state was âclearly an act of terrorism.â
Christie, speaking on âFox News Sunday,â said the blast âwas done intentionally to terrorize the people of New Jersey.â
The FBI is leading the investigation, and itâs not known who was responsible for the blast, Christie said. There are promising leads but no one has been taken into custody, he added.
The race in Seaside Park, N.J., had not started when the bomb exploded, and there were no injuries.
Clinton maintains lead in Pennsylvania, new poll finds
Hillary Clinton has a 9-point lead among likely Pennsylvania voters as Donald Trump continues to struggle among groups key to winning the state, according to a Morning Call/Muhlenberg College poll released Saturday.
The survey, conducted Sept. 12-16, found Clinton leading the presidential race in the key battleground state, with 47% of respondents saying they intend to vote for her or are leaning that way. Trump was at 38%, while 11% said theyâd pick neither of the major-party choices, and 4% said they are not sure.
Pennsylvania is a must-win state for both candidates. Many analysts regard it as the key bellwether for this election.
In push for Hillary Clinton, Obama tells black voters, âYou want to give me a good send-off? Go voteâ
President Obama delivered a forceful call to black voters on Saturday, saying that both âhopeâ and âfearâ are on the ballot this November, and that a vote for Hillary Clinton will continue his legacy.
âMy name may not be on the ballot, but our progress is on the ballot,â a fiery Obama said in remarks before an annual gala hosted by the Congressional Black Caucus in Washington.
âI will consider it a personal insult -- an insult to my legacy -- if this community lets down its guard and fails to activate itself in this election. You want to give me a good sendoff? Go vote,â Obama said to thunderous applause.
Obama, who this week campaigned for Clinton in Philadelphia, dismissed Donald Trumpâs campaign as offering âfearâ to a nation that has made progress over the last eight years.
âHope is on the ballot and fear is on the ballot too,â he said, adding that Trump would set the country back by opposing, among other things, the Affordable Care Act, a key pillar of the presidentâs tenure in office.
A day earlier, Trump, for years a vocal leader in the âbirtherâ movement questioning Obamaâs citizenship, sought to end the discussion by delivering a terse statement, affirming that Obama was born in the United States. Many have viewed Trumpâs birther comments, which date back to 2011, as racist attacks on the nationâs first African American president.
âI am so relieved the whole birther thing is over,â Obama quipped at the gala.
Clinton, who in most national and swing state polls, has a commanding lead when it comes to the support of blacks, received an award at the gala Saturday night. In her brief remarks, she did not mention Trump by name, but there was no need, everyone in the auditorium knew whose comments she was subtly denouncing.
âMr. President, not only do we know you are an American, youâre a great American,â she said.