Trump turns as Bill’s bull hits Hill 

Trump turns as Bill’s bull hits Hill 
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Highlights

Bill Clinton glibly called it \"loads of bull\" on Hillary\'s emails. Then the FBI unloaded more of it on the Hill and The Donald suddenly took a \'presidential\' pivot shaking the Democrats out of their slumber.

Washington : Bill Clinton glibly called it "loads of bull" on Hillary's emails. Then the FBI unloaded more of it on the Hill and The Donald suddenly took a 'presidential' pivot shaking the Democrats out of their slumber. Sometimes in the heat of the debate he might have said "the wrong thing," Donald Trump told a rally of laughing and cheering supporters in North Carolina before doing the unthinkable for the brash Republican presidential nominee. "And believe it or not I regret it. particularly where it may have caused personal pain," said the Manhattan mogul who has never ever backed down or apologised, as he promised to "always tell you the truth."

"Sometimes I can be too honest. Hillary Clinton is the exact opposite: she never tells the truth," said Trump delivering his most cogent message about "the New American Future we are going to create together." "Jobs, safety, opportunity, fair and equal representation, "This is what I promise to African-Americans, Hispanic-Americans, and all Americans," he said. Adding a new phrase to the political lexicon, he also called for "extreme vetting" of immigrants for ties to radical ideology, for not sharing "our values and love(ing) our people" or for believing "Sharia law supplants American law."

Outlining his plans to bring back jobs to America, defeat radical Islamic terrorism and restore law and order, Trump called for a "peaceful regime change" of the "media-donor political complex". In another deft political move, he toured flood hit Louisiana as President Barack Obama played golf on Martha's Vineyard even as a local newspaper called: "Vacation or not, a hurting Louisiana needs you now."

The new improved Trump emerged from a third shake-up of his faltering campaign amid falling poll numbers despite surging crowds at his rallies.
In came a "bare-knuckled" Breitbart News chief Steve Bannon as campaign CEO and pollster Kellyanne Conway as campaign manager who would let "Trump be Trump." Out went chief strategist Paul Manafort, who wanted him to run a more traditional campaign, amid charges of lobbying for pro-Russian Ukrainian politicians.

And as even supporters looked askance at reports of shady "pay to play" dealings between State Department aides and fat cat Clinton Foundation donors, Bill promised not to accept foreign or corporate donations if Hillary is elected president in November. Clinton's campaign also pushed back on multiple "deranged conspiracy theories" about her as Trump continued to stoke doubts about his rival's "mental and physical stamina." And as a re-energised Trump finally launched an ad war in four swing states, Clinton warned voters not to get "complacent" because she is leading in polls. But pundits wondered whether Trump's reboot has come too late to jell or is it too early to tell.

By Arun Kumar

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