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[brid video=”55267″ player=”2077″ title=”Republican National Convention Live Stream Official”]

Watch live the 2016 Republican National Convention held in Cleveland, Ohio at the Quicken Loans Arena from July 18 to 21, 2016. In 2016, the Republican Party for the fourth time will host its convention in Ohio. The Buckeye State also played host to the 1876, 1924 and 1936 Republican National Conventions in Cincinnati (’76) and Cleveland (’24 and ’36).

The states cast their official votes on Tuesday to nominate Donald J. Trump the Republican candidate for President of the United States. After last-minute drama over how Alaska’s votes were recorded, House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., who serves as the convention chairman, officially declared Donald Trump has been nominated as the Republican candidate for president with 1,725 delegates.

Traditionally, the presumptive nominee does not make his highly-anticipated speech until the final day when they give their speech accepting their party’s nomination during primetime. Mr. Trump will officially accept the Republican Party nomination for president on Thursday.

  • Monday, 18th July

    Headliners: Melania Trump, Lieutenant General (ret.) Michael Flynn, U.S. Senator Joni Ernst (R-Iowa), Jason Beardsley and U.S. Rep. Ryan Zinke (Mont.)

  • Tuesday, 19th July

    Headliners: Tiffany Trump, Kerry Woolard, Donald Trump, Jr., U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (WV), Ben Carson and Kimberlin Brown.

  • Wednesday, 20th July

    Headliners: Lynne Patton; Eric Trump; former Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives Newt Gingrich, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and Indiana Governor Mike Pence

  • Thursday, 21st July

    Headliners: Peter Thiel, Tom Barrack, Ivanka Trump and Donald Trump

Watch live stream of day 3 of

Donald-Trump-John-Kasich

Donald Trump, left, holds a rally in Columbus, Ohio, while Ohio Gov. John Kasich speaks in Manchester, N.H. (Photos: AP)

A source close to Ohio Gov. John Kasich said the New York Times story claiming Donald Trump asked him to be his VP was “fabricated garbage.” The story stated that Gov. Kasich’s campaign chief was approached by Donald Trump Jr., the eldest of the Republican presidential nominee’s five children, and asked if he’d like to be the most powerful vice president in history.

“That report is fabricated garbage, a planted lie aimed to derail Trump’s message during the convention,” the source, who spoke on the condition of anonymity told People’s Pundit Daily. “Gov. Kasich might have officially suspended his campaign, but he never stopped running and Weaver [campaign manager] never stopped running it.”

People’s Pundit Daily has followed the vice presidential selection process on both the Republican and Democratic sides of the aisle, and sources never mentioned Gov. Kasich as a serious contender.

“It’s one thing to not show up at the convention, even after you pledged to support the nominee, but this is something else altogether,” they said. “It’s something I really don’t care to be a part of.”

In fact, John Weaver publicly said this week his client “will have a better chance to be president by not supporting Donald Trump.” Much to the chagrin of party officials and voters in the Buckeye State, Gov. Kasich has thus far been a no-show after the two sides couldn’t reach an agreement.

“Negotiations broke down,” Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort said.

Following the report on Wednesday afternoon, Mr. Trump tweeted that he had never asked Gov. Kasich to be his running mate.

Sources say the New York Times story

Donald J. Trump, left, the Republican nominee for president, and Omarosa Manigault, right, the director of African-American outreach for the Trump Campaign.

Donald J. Trump, left, the Republican nominee for president, and Omarosa Manigault, right, the director of African-American outreach for the Trump Campaign.

Omarosa Manigault has been appointed the director of Donald Trump’s African-American outreach, an effort that will be ramped up post-convention. Ms. Manigault, who was known for her role on the 2004 season of “The Apprentice,” confirmed the appointment earlier this week.

“I am the director of African-American outreach for Donald Trump. I am proud to serve in that role,” Ms. Manigault said on Monday. “It is a very difficult time for our country, but the good thing I know is that I know Donald Trump at his heart … and I know what he can do in that role.”

The new director appointment will be part of a major outreach campaign in inner-cities and other regions in what is quickly becoming an expanding battleground map. As an ordained minister, Ms. Manigault will reach out to black voters of faith, many of whom feel they have been left behind by the Democratic Party. Speaking about a recent poll showing Mr. Trump with almost zero percent support among African Americans in Ohio, her home state, Ms. Manigault said she didn’t put a lot of faith in them.

“I just spent an amazing weekend with African Americans for Trump, about 300 of them,” she said. “My reality is I’m surrounded by people who want to see Donald Trump as the next president of the United States who are African Americans. Donald Trump is focused on improving the conditions of African Americans in this country … unemployment in African-American community is at an all time high.”

During an interview on Fox News Wednesday, she also said the outreach part of the campaign has partnered with unconventional venues, such as beauty shops and the like, where pocketbook decisions are made and other issues are discussed in the community.

Meanwhile, the appointment didn’t go without criticism. Spike Lee took to social media to slam Ms. Manigault, even referring to her as the N word.

“Who’s next? Step N’ Fetchit? Aunt Jemina? Uncle Ben? Sleep N’ Eat? Rastus? Lil’ (N-word) Jim?” Lee asked in a rant on Instagram. “Omarosa gonna give out free Popeye’s Chicken with sides to deliver (the) black vote to Trump? YA-DIG? SHO-NUFF. #blacklivesmatter.”

While those truly enlightening words by Mr. Lee will come across as reprehensible to many, they won’t be the last.

Omarosa Manigault has been appointed the director

The stage is seen though silhouetted production equipment and a huge video screen at Quicken Loans Arena for the 2016 Republican National Convention, Sunday, July 17, 2016, in Cleveland. (Photo: AP)

The stage is seen though silhouetted production equipment and a huge video screen at Quicken Loans Arena for the 2016 Republican National Convention, Sunday, July 17, 2016, in Cleveland. (Photo: AP)

A recent poll finds more voters say they will watch some of this week’s Republican National Convention, than the Democratic National Convention where Hillary Clinton is likely to triumph.

While Rasmussen Reports didn’t release the internals of the poll, the results shouldn’t come as a surprise. With Mr. Trump on the stage, the Republican Party drew record numbers of viewers to their televisions to watch the debates and voters to the polls. In fact, when The Donald skipped the final debate hosted by Fox News before the Iowa caucus, their ratings plummeted.

The Democratic presidential primary debates drew far fewer viewers and interest, and GOP primary voters voted in larger numbers than their Democratic counterparts is key battleground states, often considerably. In Ohio, which is hosting the 2016 Republican National Convention, Mr. Trump lost to the hometown governor with more votes than Mrs. Clinton won it with against Sen. Bernie Sanders.

Pundit’s Take

Worthing noting, the more viewers watch the convention themselves at home–rather than rely upon the media–the worse it will be for the media and Hillary Clinton. The 2016 Republican National Convention has highlighted some of the party’s disagreements, but the Quicken Loans Arena is filled with an energy and excitement that is far greater, far more intense than anything we saw for the two previous nominees.

The survey of 1,000 Likely Voters was conducted on July 14 and 17, 2016 by Rasmussen Reports. The margin of sampling error is +/- 3 percentage points with a 95% level of confidence.

A recent poll finds more voters say

A U.S. air strike in Syrian killed more than 85 civilians, including children, on Tuesday as they were fleeing from Islamic State (ISIS).

A U.S. air strike in Syrian killed more than 85 civilians, including children, on Tuesday as they were fleeing from Islamic State (ISIS). The UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the airstrikes appear to have been a case of mistaken identity, with the U.S.-led coalition misidentifying them as ISIS fighters.

The airstrikes accidentally came down on roughly eight families in the ISIS-controlled village of Tokhar, which is near Manbij in northern Syria. Witnesses say they were attempting to flee the Islamic State militants in the area. Scores of ISIS fighters are still defending the city and are keeping thousands of civilians from leaving, using them as human shields.

U.S.-backed forces believe capturing Manbij could serve as its most significant battlefield victory yet. It is roughly 30 minutes from the Syrian-Turkey border and on the supply route to Raqqa, the capital of Islamic caliphate.

The SDF, an alliance of Kurdish and Arab fighters, is trying to seize the last territory held by Islamic State on the frontier with Turkey. Manbij had served as a base for Western fighters, who for years travelled into to Syria from Europe through the porous northern border.

A U.S. air strike in Syrian killed

Trump Campaign Chairman Paul Manafort talks to delegates as he walks around the convention floor at the Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo: AP)

Trump Campaign Chairman Paul Manafort talks to delegates as he walks around the convention floor at the Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo: AP)

Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort said Wednesday the campaign believes Texas Sen. Ted Cruz deserved speaking slot at the convention. Sen. Cruz, who was the chief and often bitter rival to the Republican nominee, will take the stage Wednesday night.

“Well, Ted Cruz was one of the finalists in the nominating process, we just felt he deserved a chance to speak at the convention,” Mr. Manafort said on “Fox and Friends”.

While he has yet to endorse Mr. Trump, he is widely expected to do so during a speech that has not yet been vetted by the Trump Campaign. Sen. Cruz is reportedly focusing on broken government, pushing an outsider theme that was a central tenet in both his and Mr. Trump’s campaigns. But Mr. Manafort would not say if Sen. Cruz would finally endorse his party’s standard bearer.

Allies of the Texas senator say Sen. Cruz is setting himself up for a 2020 run by likening the speech to the one Ronald Reagan gave at the 1976 Republican National Convention, which made him the runner up in 1980. However, his favorability ratings among most in the party collapsed during the primary amid below-the-belt attacks and insults, and his name was booed several times inside the convention center when it was mentioned during Tuesday’s vote to officially nominate Trump.

Nevertheless, Mr. Manafort said he was “pleased” Sen. Cruz was speaking. He will share the stage on Wednesday with Eric Trump, the former Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives Newt Gingrich, and Indiana Governor Mike Pence, who was overwhelmingly nominated for the vice presidential slot.

“He’s got a message that resonated with Donald Trump’s message, that government is broken, and bureaucrats only care about themselves and the American people are on a downward slide,” he said. “And he will be talking about those things.”

Mr. Manafort also said there was a “very good chance” Mr. Trump will appear at least for a photo op with Gov. Pence and adding he looks forward to his speech on Thursday, when the nominee is set to officially accept the party’s nomination for president.

Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort said Wednesday

[brid video=”55358″ player=”2077″ title=”Speaker Ryan “Progressives Deliver Everything Except Progress””]

House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., gave a three-part speech at the Republican National Convention indicting the failures of leftwing philosophy.

“It’s the last chapter in an old story,” Speaker Ryan said. “Progressives deliver everything except progress.”

House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., gave a

[brid video=”55355″ player=”2077″ title=”Dana White at RNC Nobody Took UFC Seriously Except for Donald Trump”]

Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) President Dana White praised his friend Donald Trump at the Republican National Convention. Mr. White said everyone from the state athletic commissions and beyond were against the UFC, except for Mr. Trump.

“Nobody took us seriously, except for Donald Trump,” Mr. White said. “Just for the record, Donald has nothing to do with my business. We are not in business together. His interest in me was personal.”

“I’ve been in the fighting business my whole life and I know a fighter when I see one,” he added. “Donald Trump is a fighter and I know he will fight for this country.”

Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) President Dana White

NBC host Lawrence O'Donnell, left, interviews disgraced former Democratic Rep. Anthony Weiner, right.

NBC host Lawrence O’Donnell, left, interviews disgraced former Democratic Rep. Anthony Weiner, right.

My Fox colleagues are in Cleveland, diligently interviewing Republicans. Next week, they’ll interview Democrats. I’m glad they do it — because I despise most politicians.

There are exceptions, of course, but after years of reporting, I’ve concluded that most politicians have little to say that’s interesting, and many are craven opportunists, desperate to rule over others.

A few stand out, like former Congressman Anthony Weiner. Like many politicians, he’s never held a real job. He’s run for office or worked for politicians all his life.

Weiner married one of Hillary Clinton’s closest advisers, passionately pushed leftists’ bad ideas and was a member of Congress.

Then a photo of an anonymous man’s bulging underwear was tweeted from his account. He ended up having to resign from Congress.

That embarrassment alone would send most mortals into hiding, but not Weiner. He decided to campaign for mayor of New York City, and New York’s Democrats even forgave him. Polls showed he was the front-runner.

Then came more sleazy stuff. He sent out naked pictures under the name “Carlos Danger.”

A new documentary, “Weiner,” chronicles these events. “This really is a great movie,” says Reason.com’s Anthony Fisher. It illustrates “how sick this drive for elective office can be.”

In the movie, NBC’s Lawrence O’Donnell asks Weiner, “What’s wrong with you?” Weiner doesn’t even understand the question. O’Donnell elaborates, “you cannot seem to imagine a life without elective office?” Weiner still doesn’t get it.

Maybe one needs to be sick to run for office. Weiner is a disciple of New York senator Chuck Schumer.

Schumer famously said, “I was born to legislate.” This goes to the heart of the political sickness — the need to tell others how to live. As economist Walter Williams puts it, “I respect ordinary thieves more than I respect politicians. Ordinary thieves take my money without pretense. (They don’t) insult my intelligence by proclaiming that they’ll use the money that they steal from me to make my life better.”

In the next weeks, as cameras record every utterance burped up by politicians at the political conventions, I’ll take comfort knowing that when politicians can’t force us to do things, people often ignore them (remember, government is force; this is why politicians are important, and dangerous).

Here’s another happy story about people ignoring them.

After Anthony Weiner sleazed himself into oblivion, another clueless socialist, Bill de Blasio, was elected mayor of New York. De Blasio embraces every leftist cause. After the restaurant chain Chick-fil-A was attacked by Democratic interest groups because its CEO opposes gay marriage, de Blasio told New Yorkers not to eat there. He said Chick-fil-A spreads a “message of hate” and “wouldn’t urge any other New Yorkers to patronize them.”

Now, there’s nothing wrong with a boycott. Boycotts are free speech, a way to voice disapproval without getting government involved.

Some craven politicians misunderstand that concept. Boston’s mayor declared that Chick-fil-A was “not welcome” in his town, and some Chicago politicians said they would deny Chick-fil-A the necessary permits. After the politicians were told that they don’t have a legal right to ban businesses because of things the owners say, they backed down. They just pushed the boycott.

When politicians support boycotts without using the power of their office to boycott by force, we get to see whether the public really cares what politicians think.

So at lunchtime recently, I walked around to see if (mostly pro-gay marriage) New Yorkers were honoring our mayor’s request.
Nope.

In fact, at two Chick-fil-A outlets close to my office, customers lined up to get sandwiches. At one restaurant, the line was so long that it extended outside the store and onto the sidewalk.

I asked waiting customers why they went to Chick-fil-A, since our mayor says the company is anti-gay.

“I didn’t think that had anything to do with the sandwich,” said one. Another made me smile by saying, “Too bad. I don’t care about what the mayor says.”

When we have a choice, Americans ignore politicians. That’s usually a good thing.

After years of reporting, I've concluded that

People's Pundit Daily
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