Wednesday, August 3, 2016

Everything you need to know about Katrina Pierson


Donkey of the day | Katrina Pierson

Picture the average Donald Trump supporter in your head. Whomever you pictured probably looks nothing like Katrina Pierson.

A single mother, Pierson voted for Barack Obama in 2008 and served on Texas Sen. Ted Cruz"s Senatecampaign in 2012. But it"s Pierson who supplies the average Trump supporter with their dinner table talking points.

Trump, the presumptive Republican nominee, tapped the 39-year-old Pierson to be his national spokeswoman in November. According to Politico, Pierson had impressed Trump, whom she met on the campaign trail while working for Cruz.

Pierson"s ascent into the spotlight of U.S. politics is as much the quintessential all-American story of a self-made life as it is unlikely.

As spokeswoman, Pierson serves as the Trump campaign"s most visible form of damage control. Over the course of nearly nine months, Pierson has served as Trump"s main line of defense on the broadcast news circuit, maintains an active social media presence, and scores regular appearances before CNN"s Don Lemon and Fox News" Megyn Kelly.

To most PR people, defending Trump might seem like a tall order. But Pierson seemed to be well aware of that when she signed on to the job. The native of Garland, Texas, exhibits an admiration for Trump and his message that sometimes seems limitless. Even when her boss offends women, Muslims, or people of color, Pierson stands by his side.

Perhaps Mr. Trump could have gone out and blamed Brexit on a video that never existed and maybe the media would have been okay with that.

The truth is, no one truly interesting is universally liked. So, most of the spin is to correct the biased reporting when he is pulled out of context, Piersonsaidin a December interview with the Dallas Morning News. The things he says are only controversial because we have evolved into a cupcake society. Everyone is offended by everything thanks to years of political correctness.

Pierson"s disregard for political correctness is clear. You may be familiar with Pierson as the Trump official who retorted So what, they"re Muslim! in the middle of adebatewith S.E. Cupp on Trump"s proposed ban on Muslim immigration. Or from when Pierson tweeted, Are there any purebreeds left? during the 2012 election, referring to the fathers of then President Obama and Republican nominee Mitt Romney being born overseas. Pierson also referred to President Obama on Twitter as the head Negro in charge. Like Obama, Pierson is half black.

When #TrumpGirlsBreaktheInternet began trending on Twitter, Pierson gamely jumped on the bandwagon.

Pierson,much like her boss, is candid and outspoken on both social media and cable news. When Pierson defends one of Trumps" controversial positions on immigration, women, or national security, it will often add more fuel to the fire. If one of Trump"s statements lack any basis in fact, Pierson will often insist that it does. After Politifact foundTrump"s claims on the vetting process to admit Syrian refugees into the United States false, Piersonretorted, Were not going to base national security off PolitiFact or even the United Nations.

If one of Trump"s statements just seems ill-timed or insensitive, Pierson will often outright deflect. Trump was criticized for pointing out that one of the merits of Brexit was that it would bring more people to his golf course in Scotland; when asked to explain the faux pas, Pierson changed the subject to the Benghazi scandal,incorrectly stating that a YouTube video that sparked protests in the Middle East never existed.

Perhaps Mr. Trump could have gone out and blamed Brexit on a video that never existed and maybe the media would have been okay with that, Pierson said.

Such an approach has picked up plenty of criticism, even from Republicans.

[Pierson] is a vital and integral part of Donald Trumps plan to lose the election and hand the White House over to Hillary Clinton, said Republican consultant Mike Murphy in an email to the Daily Dot. She is a message train wreck.

Others, meanwhile, have a more positive assessment of Pierson"s ability to control the message of a candidate as unpredictable as Trumpeven if Pierson still seems like an odd choice for a major campaign spokeswoman.

Cal Jillson, a political science professor at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, said in an interview with the Daily Dot that Trump"s hiring of Pierson was deeply surprising to him given her lack of experience. Jillson admitted his first thoughts upon hearing that Trump had picked Pearson was, What the h**l was he thinking? How did he even find out about her?

Despite her relative newness to the world of national politics and presidential elections, Pierson has risen to the challenge, Jillson said.

On the whole, she has not had the difficulty in being a spokeswoman that I would have expected her to have, Jillson said. There was no reason to believe when she was selected out of Dallas that she knew anything about national security, military affairs, even national domestic politics.

Prior to being hired by Trump, Pierson was a local Tea Party activist in Dallas who made a long-shot bid in 2014 to unseat incumbent Republican Rep. Pete Sessions. Even though she won the endorsement of former Alaska governor and 2008 vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin and conservative immigration group Americans for Legal Immigration, Sessions easily bested Pierson. Arizona sheriff Joe Arpaio, a notorious hardliner on immigration who famously accused Obama of forging his own birth certificate, abruptly pulled his endorsement of Pierson during the campaign.

According to theDallas Morning News, Arpaio accused Pierson of misleading him on her challenger Sessions" track record on immigration. Given that Session"s congressional voting record is public, it"s hard to take such an accusation seriously. It"s more likely that Pierson"s campaign, as reflected by its scant fundraising, was hard to take seriously.

She was not seen as a rising figure, said Jillson of Pierson"s status in Texas politics.

On the whole, she has not had the difficulty in being a spokeswoman that I would have expected her to have.

Fast forward to two years later, and Pierson is now the spokeswomen for the likely Republican nominee for president.

Pierson technically isn"t a staffer; the campaign instead bills her for consulting services. Pierson"sconsulting firmracked in more than $11, 200 from the Trump campaign during November and December 2015, according to year-end FECfilings.

Unlike Trump"s decidedly low-profile press secretary, Hope Hicks, or ousted campaign manager Corey Lewandowski, any press attention that Pierson gets is intentional. It"s Pierson who, for example, explains on MSNBC what Trump meant by saying a Hispanic judge was incapable of being fair, or who defends claims of misogyny against Trump on The Kelly File. It"s Pierson who argues before CNN"s Wolf Blitzer that Trump hasn"t flip-flopped on his position on guns in the face of criticisms that he has.

In one of her most talked-about moments, back in December 2015, Pierson wore a necklace made of bullets to a CNN interviewthat did not focus on guns. This prompted host Jim Sciutto and gun safety advocates to tweet at Pierson after the segment to ask her motives behind the jewelry.

Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America tweeted, surely @KatrinaPierson wore the bullet necklace on #CNN to bring attention to 90 Americans fatally shot daily #gunsense.

In response, Pierson tweeted this:

Pierson"s ascent from an impoverished childhood in Kansas to a Texas Tea Party darling is nothing if not unlikely. According to the Huffington Post, Pierson was born in Wichita, Kansas, in 1976 to a white mother and black father. Pierson"s childhood was not a happy one, and Pierson"s mother was left to raise her on her own. At a 2013 March for Jobs in Washington, D.C., Pierson detailed a childhoodspent in poverty.

Coming from an abusive home, raised in poverty, I even had written myself off as just a simple statistic, said Pierson. She went on to say that, through her free will, she made choices that took her on a different pathmaking her the embodiment of the conservative ideal of self-determination.

I dreamed of having my own house with a swimming pool and backyard, and eventually, becoming my own boss. But where I came from, that wasn"t just a dream, that was a fantasy, Pierson said.

Pierson is staunchly against government benefits such as welfare and unemployment. She criticizes those who rely on it, including her own mother, as accepting handouts from the government. Shortly after Pierson was hiredby Trump, the Texas politics blog Quorum Report revealed that she collected unemployment benefits from the state of Texas while working for the Cruz campaign in 2012 and 2013. Instead of apologizing, Pierson defended her use of government benefits as a single mother.

"I"m not sure what the scandal is here," Pierson toldthe Dallas Morning News.

Despite being a teenage single mom herself, Pierson went on to graduate in 2006 from the University of TexasinDallas with a degree in biology. Pierson voted for Obama in 2008, the same year she went on to a career in healthcare administration. By the time President Obama signed the Affordable Care Act into law in March 2010, Pierson was serving as a practice administrator for Baylor University"s health care system.

Pierson"s hatred of Obamacare, as well as the administration"s stance on immigration, is likely to have drawn her to the Tea Party, to Ted Cruz, and finally to Donald Trump. She told the Dallas Morning News that she picked Trump because was tougher on immigration than Cruz.

She did have a rocky and difficult early life.

Cruz had a noticeably softer stance than Trump on undocumented workers. In December 2015, he refused to provide them work permits. Trump, on the other hand, hoped to deport them all. Perhaps in response to this, Cruz toughened up on immigration midway through primary season.

... Ive watched too many Americans in the tech industry lose jobs along with healthcare workers be passed over jobs due to HB1 visas simply because of the lower wages, said Pierson. Americans should come first.

To some observers, however, Pierson"s loyalty to Trump doesn"t seem to simply be a matter of politics. Pierson had little to lose before being hired by the Trump campaign. Her popularity rose with the popularity of the Tea Party, but the party is nowlosing momentum. She was a regular on Fox News Business but remained a virtual unknown outside of Texas politics. While Cruz called her fearless,Politico reported that Pierson was far from being inside his inner circle. Those who worked with her on the Cruz campaign gave a generally negative assessment to Politico, painting her as opportunistic.

Despite such dismal prospects, Pierson still remains ambitious. She still strives.

She did have a rocky and difficult early life, said Jillson. She maintained a level of self-confidence in a sense that something good was going to happen.

While Pierson"s ideologies shift and may contradict with her upbringing, the fervor behind them is unflinching. Pierson, Jillson said, was available to any rising tide. And the rising tide she managed to capture was the Trump campaign.

Source: http://www.dailydot.com/layer8/who-is-katrina-pierson/

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The Cowboys have a quarterback crisis


Purple Drank In Da Hood

Matthew Emmons-USA TODAY Sports

First, there was fat Tony Romo. Now, his backup, Kellen Moore, has a broken ankle.

The Cowboys" backup QB situation just got more confusing. The Dallas Cowboys suffered bad news today when backup quarterback Kellen Moore suffered a broken ankle.

Enter Nick Foles. Dallas has rookie Dak Prescott, a fourth-round pick, but that"s not the kind of backup situation they can really afford to live through, not after last season and with so much riding on this year. There are a lot of people who think Foles could be their next option. There are a few other names out there too.

THE HIKING VIKING:Moritz Bhringer walks the walk. Literally. He walks an hour everyday to practice.

THE PATS WITHOUT BRADY:How will the Patriots offense change while Tom Brady is suspended? Can one of the leagues most prolific offenses carry on without him?

GREEN BAY COMICON:Nobody in the NFL has the kind of established nerd credentials that the Packers do.

CHEAP a*s CHARGERS:Calling bullsh*t on Joey Bosa"s holdout. The Chargers are being petty. What else is new.

STAY OFF THE PURPLE DRANK:Rolando McClain tests positive for purple drank. It also led to an extra 40 pounds on his frame. Good thing he"s got a 10-game suspension to work it off.

Get all kinds of NFL stories, rumors, game coverage, and inane comments from the NFL media in your inbox every day.

MONEY BADGER:Cardinals make Tyrann Mathieu the highest-paid safety in the NFL. The Honey Badger signed a five-year, $62.5 million deal with $40 million guaranteed. It"s good to be the Honey Badger.

THE DREAM IS OVER:Baltimore Ravens waive Trent Richardson. An injury kept him from participating in the early part of camp.

THE KC MASTERPIECE: Stay humble, Kirk Cousins. Washington"s quarterback puts the aww in aww shucks.

CHARGERS REPLACE JOHNSON:James Jones signs with the Charger. With Stevie Johnson set to undergo surgery, the Chargers added some depth to their wideout corps.

ATLANTA ADDS A PASS RUSHER:What signing Dwight Freeney means to the Falcons. As a rotational pass rusher, its a great signing

BILLS SIGN BUSH:What will Reggie Bushs role be with the Buffalo Bills? The Bills are adding a punt returner first.

SEATTLE"S FRONT MORE FEARSOME? Seahawks training camp: Cliff Avril gushes over Seattles pass rush potential. Can Seattle improve from 18th in sacks?

CAN"T SPELL "ELITE" WITHOUT "ELI" Breaking down Eli Manning. What should we expect from the other Manning this season, at age 35?

BAD NEWS RAMS:Rams cancel "Rams Legends" game reportedly due to poor ticket sales. The Rams are off to a less-than-riotous start in their native Los Angeles. Just wait until they get a taste of Fisher Ball in the regular season.

Source: http://www.sbnation.com/nfl/2016/8/3/12367098/dallas-cowboys-backup-quarterback-kellen-moore-injury-rumors-nick-foles

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Duckworth slams Trump"s Purple Heart comment


FULL PURPLE HEART MOMENT: Donald Trump in Virginia

CHICAGO (WLS) --

Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump is getting more campaign flak. Following his recent controversy over his feud with the Muslim parents of a fallen U.S. serviceman, Trump was handed a Purple Heart by one of his supporters at a Tuesday rally.

"I"ve always wanted to get a Purple Heart. This was much easier," Trump told his supporters.

Double amputee Iraq War veteran and Democratic Illinois congresswoman Tammy Duckworth responded to his remarks, tweeting a photo of her own Purple Heart with the caption "There"s nothing easy about it."

Duckworth is running for U.S. Senate against GOP incumbent Sen. Mark Kirk who is not supporting Trump"s presidential campaign.

The Iraq veteran who gave Trump the Purple Heart said he supports him.

"One hundred percent, I"m behind him. I know other veterans that are behind him. I"m just glad that I could do my little part," he said.

The Purple Heart wasn"t the only headline to emerge from that rally, as Trump was interrupted by a crying baby.

"Don"t worry about that baby. I love babies, I love babies!" Trump said. But one minute later, he took it back.

"Actually I was only kidding. You can get the baby out of here. That"s alright. Don"t worry. I think she really believed me, that I loved having a baby crying while I"m speaking. That"s okay," Trump said.

President Obama also had strong words for Trump Tuesday, declaring publicly the candidate isn"t fit to hold the office of the presidency and calling out Republicans.

"If you are repeatedly having to say in very strong terms that what he has said is unacceptable, why are you still endorsing him?" President Obama asked.

(Copyright 2016 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.)

Source: http://abc7chicago.com/politics/duckworth-slams-trumps-purple-heart-comment/1454484/

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The Samsung Galaxy Note7 is official with a Snapdragon 820, 5.7-inch curved AMOLED, iris scanner, and more


Samsung Galaxy Note 7 iris scanner

The number "six" is so last yearSamsung has just announced the Galaxy Note7 to bring the numbering in-line with the flagship S phones. There were a myriad of leaks leading up to this moment, so nothing here istoo surprising. It"s a big Samsung phone with a stylus, a curved AMOLED, an iris scanner, and speedy internals.

Let"s get the specs out of the way.

  • SoC: Snapdragon 820 (North America, China, and Japan), Exynoseverywhere else
  • RAM: 4GB
  • Display: 5.7-inch 1440p curved AMOLED
  • Storage: 64GB plus microSD card
  • Cameras: 12MP rear sensor, OIS, f/1.7 5MP front sensor, f/1.7
  • Battery: 3,500mAh with fast charging and wireless charging
  • Measurements: 153.5 x 73.9 x 7.9mm, 169g

The device certainly looks like a Note, but the design has been refined. The curved shape makes it more comfortable to hold, IP68, the pen doesn"t go in backward anymore, and Samsung has started using a harder type of aluminum in the frame. There"s also a USB type-C port on the bottoma first for Samsung. The iris scanning tech that has been rumored for years is included in the Note7. It works by flashing an IR pulse with the notification LED and watching for the reflection using a dedicated secondary camera.

Left: Note5, Right: Note7

The Note7 launches with Android 6.0.1 Marshmallow, so you"ll be waiting for a Nougat update. The TouchWiz UI has also gotten a light revamp, but that"s par for the Note series. The software includes a few new stylus-oriented features like the Smart Select GIF maker, as well asmagnifier and translate shortcuts in Air Command.

In the US, you"ll get your choice of a Gear Fit2 or a 256GB microSD card with purchase. AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, US Cellular, and Verizon Wireless will all have pre-orders on August 3rd (tomorrow) and the phone should be in stores on or around August 19th. Pricing is not confirmed yet, and will probably vary a bit by carrier. We will update with more information on that front as it"s available.

Source: http://www.androidpolice.com/2016/08/02/samsung-galaxy-note-7-official-snapdragon-820-5-7-inch-curved-amoled-3500mah-battery/

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Paul Ryan, Debbie Wasserman Schultz primaries to test voters" mood


Donald Trump not endorsing Paul Ryan

House Speaker Paul Ryan and Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz are about to test voters" anti-establishment mood, firsthand.

In an election year that"s seen both parties" supporters seethe against Washington, 15 states from Florida to Arizona still have House primaries. That includes challenges against Ryan, R-Wis., and Wasserman Schultz, D-Fla., who abruptly resigned last week as chair of the Democratic National Committee.

Both seem likely to prevail, but surprises can happen in low-turnout summer primaries.

Here"s a look at noteworthy contests, a prelude to a November election in which Democrats will make a long-shot bid to capture House control:

Elections this year

Before this week, 31 states had held 2016 House primaries. Three incumbents lost, but none of their races supported the argument that voters want to throw the incumbents out of the House, anyway.

Rep. Renee Ellmers fell to fellow North Carolina GOP Rep. George Holding, and Virginia Republican Rep. Randy Forbes also lost, victims of court-ordered, redrawn district lines. Rep. Chaka Fattah, D-Pa., was defeated in April after an indictment on federal corruption charges. He was later convicted and quit Congress.

This week

Four states held House primaries Tuesday.

In the most striking, Rep. Tim Huelskamp, R-Kan., a tea partyer and persistent annoyance to GOP leaders, lost his attempt for a fourth term.

Huelskamp"s contest against Roger Marshall, an obstetrician, was unusual because GOP primary challengers usually accuse incumbents of being insufficiently conservative. Marshall argued that Huelskamp"s rebelliousness got him kicked off the House Agriculture Committee, which is vital for western Kansas.

Their contest became a proxy battle between GOP conservatives and pragmatists. The anti-tax Club for Growth spent $400,000 to help Huelskamp and members of the conservative House Freedom Caucus campaigned for him. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the Ending Spending Action Fund, which wants to curb federal expenditures, spent big dollars against him.

Ryan"s race

Political novice Paul Nehlen wants to end Ryan"s House career after nine terms, and he"s getting help from Donald Trump. An unlikely defeat in the Aug. 9 primary would probably spell political doom for the GOP"s 2012 vice presidential candidate and potential future presidential contender.

A tattooed, motorcycle-riding businessman, Nehlen labeled the speaker "Lyin" Ryan" on Twitter. He"s attacked Ryan for favoring a Pacific trade deal and accuses him of being lax on immigration and beholden to the establishment.

Nehlen got a boost from Trump when the GOP presidential candidate said in a Tuesday interview with The Washington Post that he is "not quite there yet" in endorsing Ryan. That could be payback for Ryan saying in May that he was "just not ready" to back Trump. Ryan subsequently endorsed Trump but has criticized him frequently, and their relationship is cool.

Trump praised Nehlen this week for defending his criticism of the Muslim parents of an American soldier slain in Iraq.

Ryan campaign spokesman Zack Roday expressed confidence in a primary victory and said, "Neither Speaker Ryan nor anyone on his team has ever asked for Donald Trump"s endorsement."

Ryan has raised 12 times the $489,000 Nehlen has reported collecting. Not taking chances, Ryan is airing his third TV ad, with people waving flags and praying as Ryan tells the camera, "I am committed to securing our borders."

Wasserman Schultz"s travails

Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders complained that Wasserman Schultz"s DNC, which historically has remained neutral in presidential primary season, backed his victorious Democratic presidential rival, Hillary Clinton. Wasserman Schultz abandoned her party post as last week"s Democratic convention began after leaked emails revealed party staffers doing just what Sanders suspected.

That"s turned Wasserman Schultz"s focus to her Aug. 30 primary, where she"s opposed by upstart law professor Tim Canova. He"s backed by Sanders and has mimicked Sanders" populist style by raising huge sums from small individual contributions. That"s let Canova stay surprisingly competitive financially, raising $2.3 million compared to Wasserman Schultz"s $3.1 million.

Yet the Miami-area district favored Clinton over Sanders by 2-1 in March"s presidential primary. And Wasserman Schultz, seeking a seventh House term, gets high marks for paying attention back home.

Florida frenzy

About half of Florida"s 27 districts feature competitive primaries, including seven where incumbents are stepping down or running for the Senate:

Republican Rep. Jeff Miller is leaving a Panhandle seat so conservative that one leading competitor, State Sen. Greg Evers, raffled off an AR-15 rifle among people who "liked" his Facebook page. Another, State Rep. Matt Gaetz, backed a local sheriff who called the Black Lives Matter group "a terrorist organization."

Democratic Rep. Corrine Brown, indicted on federal fraud charges, faces strong competition in north Florida.

GOP Rep. Dan Webster, who unsuccessfully challenged Rep. John Boehner for the House speakership in 2015, is seeking a different open seat after his district became too Democratic.

The rest

Liz Cheney, daughter of former Vice President d**k Cheney, is a favorite GOP contender for Wyoming"s open, lone House seat Aug. 16.

An Aug. 30 fight among Republicans for the northern Arizona seat of Democratic Rep. Ann Kirkpatrick, who"s challenging GOP Sen. John McCain.

A Sept. 13 challenge to Rep. Frank Guinta, R-N.H., perhaps the most endangered House incumbent, whom the Federal Election Commission said accepted illegal 2010 campaign contributions from his parents.

Associated Press

Source: http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/politics/ct-primary-elections-paul-ryan-debbie-wasserman-schultz-20160803-story.html

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What Is National Night Out 2016? NYC, California And More Celebrate With Activities, Block Parties And Other Events


National Night Out 2016

In Dallas, five police officers were killed by a gunman angry with law enforcement for killing black men. In Missouri, a family mourns the loss of 18-year-oldMichael Brown, an unarmed black student killed in a fatal police shooting.

With tensions high between minorities and police departments across the nation, local leaderswill host National Night Out activities Tuesday to bolster ties between law enforcement leaders and the communities they serve. The annual event comes at a time when lawmakers and social justice activists are calling for police reforms amid high rates of police killingsand a growing trend of brutal death by policevideos being shared on social media.

In California, communities includingAnaheim, Costa Mesa, Laguna Beach, San Francisco and Yucca Valley will hold celebrations to honor National Night out. In New York, there will be block parties and concertsin New York City,Rochester, White Plains and other cities.A full list of events can be found here.Roughly 38 million people in 16,000 communitiesare expected to participate.

"National Night Outs objectives include refining the nationwide crime prevention campaign, documenting successful crime prevention strategies, expanding Project 365, disseminating information about successful community-based strategies, providing technical assistance on crime prevention program development, and developing the National Night Out Web site," according to the site.

Law enforcement officials killed nearly 1,000 people last year, according to a Washington Post investigation.About34 U.S. law enforcement officers havedied from shootings in 2016, up79 percent from last year, according to theNational Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund, which keeps data on officers killed on the job.

After a man opened fire on Dallas police in July, President Barack Obama urged law enforcement officials to build trust in the communities they served. He also celebrated police officers for keeping communities safe.

"Id ask all Americans to say a prayer for these officers and their families. Keep them in your thoughts. And as a nation, lets remember to express our profound gratitude to our men and women in blue -- not just today, but every day," he said at the time.

Source: http://www.ibtimes.com/what-national-night-out-2016-nyc-california-more-celebrate-activities-block-parties-2396110

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Trump Refuses to Back Paul Ryan, John McCain in GOP Primary


Donald Trump not endorsing Paul Ryan
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Donald Trump is testing just how far he can push his unconventional campaign without wrecking it.

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump holds a press conference at Trump National Doral on July 27, 2016, in Doral, Florida. Trump spoke about the Democratic Convention and called on Russia to find Hillary Clinton"s deleted e-mails. (Credit: Gustavo Caballero/Getty Images)

The Republican nominee shattered traditional political boundaries Tuesday when he told The Washington Post he isn"t backing House Speaker Paul Ryan or Sen. John McCain as they face primary challenges. The two leading Republicans seemingly angered Trump with their denunciation of his criticism of the family of a slain Muslim US soldier.

Trump"s comments -- delivered to a newspaper he"s banned from attending his events since mid-June -- capped a bizarre day on the campaign trail that also included asking for a crying baby to be removed from a rally and causing a stir over Purple Hart recipients.

In his interview with the Post, Trump criticized Ryan, saying, "We need very strong leadership."

"We need very, very strong leadership," Ryan said. "And I"m just not quite there yet. I"m not quite there yet."

Trump"s phrasing -- "I"m not quite there yet" -- echoes comments Ryan made to CNN"s Jake Tapper in May when he said he wasn"t yet ready to back his party"s standard-bearer. Zach Roday, a Ryan campaign spokesman, said the speaker hasn"t asked for Trump"s endorsement and is "confident in a victory next week regardless."

Trump"s comments come as he is under the most severe bipartisan fire of his campaign following his criticism of Khizr and Ghazala Khan, whose son Humayun Khan, died in Iraq in 2004. The Khans delivered one of the most powerful appearances at last week"s Democratic National Convention, where Khizr said Trump has "sacrificed nothing and no one."

Trump"s response

Trump responded by criticizing Ghazala Khan"s silence, suggesting she wasn"t allowed to speak because of her religion and saying he made plenty of sacrifices for his business.

The Republican nominee has struggled to recover from the episode as easily as he has from previous controversies. A knowledgeable GOP source told CNN some of Trump"s campaign staff -- even campaign chairman Paul Manafort -- are incredibly frustrated with the candidate. Some staffers "feel like they are wasting their time" because Trump has veered off message so much since the Democratic convention.

Trump spokesman Jason Miller rejected suggestions that Manafort is "mailing it in" as "completely erroneous." The campaign "just finished up our strongest month of fundraising to date, we"re adding talented and experienced staffers on a daily basis and Mr. Trump"s turning out bigger, more enthusiastic crowds than Hillary Clinton ever could."

Still, Trump"s challenge became clear in a series of strange moments Tuesday.

At a rally in family-friendly suburban Northern Virginia, Trump reversed the stereotype of baby-kissing politicians when he called for a wailing infant to be ejected -- spurring laughter after initially saying how much he loved babies. He also caused a stir when a military veteran gave Trump a Purple Heart, prompting Trump to say he "always wanted a Purple Heart" and this was "much easier" than serving in combat.

As the rally unfolded, President Barack Obama spoke from the White House, calling Trump "unfit for the presidency."

"The notion that he would attack a Gold Star family that made such extraordinary sacrifices on behalf of our country, the fact that he doesn"t appear to have basic knowledge of critical issues in Europe, the Middle East, in Asia, means that he"s woefully unprepared to do this job," Obama said.

In an interview with Washington"s WJLA-TV, Trump said it"s Obama who is "unfit" for the Oval Office.

"He"s a terrible president," Trump said. "He"ll probably go down as the worst president in the history of our country. He"s been a total disaster."

And as much of the political world looks on in horror, Trump"s supporters remain loyal, cheering him on at Tuesday"s rally in Ashburn, Virginia.

Alienation from the party

But his alienation from the rest of the party establishment only seemed to grow.

Maria Comella, a longtime aide to New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, told CNN"s Jamie Gangel Tuesday she plans to vote for Hillary Clinton, saying Republicans are "at a moment where silence isn"t an option."

"Donald Trump has been a demagogue this whole time, preying on people"s anxieties with loose information and salacious rhetoric, drumming up fear and hatred of the "other,"" Comella said.

"Instead of trying anything remotely like unifying the country, we have a nominee who would rather pick fights because he views it as positive news coverage," she said. "It may make him media savvy, but it doesn"t make him qualified or ready to be president."

Meg Whitman, the Hewlett Packard chief executive who ran in 2010 for governor of California as a Republican, also said Tuesday she would support Clinton.

In a statement, she blasted Trump"s "demagoguery" and said his positions on immigration, the economy and foreign policy "have made it abundantly clear that he lacks both the policy depth and sound judgment required as President."

"It is clear to me that Secretary Clinton"s temperament, global experience and commitment to America"s bedrock national values make her the far better choice in 2016 for President of the United States," she said. "I urge all Republicans to reject Donald Trump this November."

The New York Times first reported Whitman"s decision Tuesday.

The comments follow Sally Bradshaw, a senior Jeb Bush advisor, who told Gangel Monday she had quit the party and would vote for Clinton if Florida was close.

"This is a time when country has to take priority over political parties. Donald Trump cannot be elected president," Bradshaw said.

Meanwhile, New York Rep. Richard Hanna announced he will vote for Clinton in an editorial on Syracuse.com, saying Trump is "deeply flawed in endless ways."

Hanna is not running for re-election so he has less at stake than other Republicans. But he"s not the only Republican moving away from Trump.

Top party leaders including Ryan and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell are feeling the pressure. Though they have criticized Trump"s feud with the soldier"s family, they have yet to walk back tepid endorsements of Trump.

McCain went further than virtually any of his colleagues in a statement on Monday.

"While our Party has bestowed upon him the nomination, it is not accompanied by unfettered license to defame those who are the best among us," McCain said. "I cannot emphasize enough how deeply I disagree with Mr. Trump"s statement. I hope Americans understand that the remarks do not represent the views of our Republican Party, its officers, or candidates."

But even the Arizona senator, facing a re-election race in which he needs both pro-Trump and anti-Trump voters, did not explicitly call on Republicans to dump their nominee.

That point could yet come, should Clinton"s seven-point convention bounce solidify into a sustained polling lead.

During his news conference, Obama expanded on an emerging Democratic strategy to convince die-hard Republicans not to put a cross next to Trump"s name in November, even if they vote the rest of the GOP ticket.

"Why are you still endorsing him?"

"If you are repeatedly having to say in very strong terms that what he has said is unacceptable, why are you still endorsing him?" Obama asked. "This isn"t a situation where you have an episodic gaffe."

He went on: "There has to be a point in which you say this is not somebody I can support for president of the United States, even if he purports to be a member of my party. ...There has to come a point at which you say enough."

In another example of a scattershot campaign, Trump"s son, Eric, was drawn into a discussion about workplace behavior following the resignation of Fox News chief Roger Ailes over sexual harassment allegations.

He told CBS" Charlie Rose that said his sister Ivanka was "strong" and "powerful" and would never allow herself to be sexually harassed by her boss

The comment drew a one-word tweet from Fox News host Megyn Kelly: "Sigh."

Still despite the gathering chaos around Trump, lingering questions still surround his campaign and those who criticize him.

He is so unorthodox that it is sometimes tough for those caught up in the maelstrom to judge what is happening against a credible political scale. His antics often beg the question of whether Trump has so skewed campaign logic that he has tapped into a connection with voters that normal politicians don"t even recognize. That makes it far too early to write him off.

But equally, it"s possible America is currently watching the meltdown of the billionaire"s campaign. Perhaps the most unorthodox, unpredictable candidate ever has hit limits of political convention that even he can"t trump?

American political sages are not alone in trying to figure out the riotous election -- the world is watching too.

Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong was cast in the role of puzzled foreigner as he stood alongside Obama in the White House.

Lee noted that often, after volatile election campaigns, a cooler atmosphere prevails and the ship of state "does not turn completely upside down" and putting his faith in the system of checks and balances.

"It is not so easy to do things, but it is not so easy to completely mess things up," he said.

Source: http://ktla.com/2016/08/03/trump-not-endorsing-paul-ryan-john-mccain-in-gop-primary/

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