Donald Trump: prepare for a nasty and bruising contest
Now the Republican Party must live with the candidate it never imagined would be the Presidential nominee.
Kylie Morris is the former Washington correspondent and the former Asia correspondent for Channel 4 News. She was also the presenter of More 4 News.
Kylie previously worked at the BBC as the Gaza correspondent from 2001-2002, Kabul correspondent 2002-2004, for which she won an FPA award, and then as the BBC Asia correspondent until joining Channel 4 News in 2006.
One of her first assignments for Channel 4 News was reporting the conflict in Lebanon in July 2006, for which we collectively won an RTS Award. She has been in and out of the newsroom in the last two years - recently she reported the Gulnaz film alongside Leslie Knott and Cleminitne Malpas which has just been nominated for another FPA award.
The polls had suggested Hillary Clinton would narrowly win the election – so her defeat in a series of key states left her supporters in tears. Our Washington Correspondent Kylie Morris reports from New York.
It’s been a campaign of sound and fury, anger and low blows. But now it’s down to the voters of America to decide who – for the next four years – is to be President of the United States,
Kylie Morris reports on the FBI’s Hillary Clinton email probe, which has exploded a political hand grenade in the final days of the Presidential race.
Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump go head to head again later tonight as the final debate of the US presidential campaign takes place in Las Vegas. After the bitter exchanges of the last debate in St Louis earlier this month, there’s a sense that almost anything can happen.
Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump go head to head again later tonight as the final debate of the US presidential campaign takes place in Las Vegas. After the bitter exchanges of the last debate in St Louis earlier this month, there’s a sense that almost anything can happen.
The state of Florida could well decide whether Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton is the next US President. Two communities could tip the scales in the all important state. Newly registered Hispanic voters, likely to support Clinton – and retirees, who re-locate south for the sunshine, and favour Trump.
Now the Republican Party must live with the candidate it never imagined would be the Presidential nominee.
If Donald Trump wins the New Hampshire primary, layers of smugness will settle around him like a protective carapace.
It’s the moment the US presidential election really gets going, as the first votes are cast for the man – or woman – party followers want to see in the White House.
The pipes that deliver water in Flint, Michigan, are now so corroded by water from the local river, they turn clean water toxic. There’s no magic that can undo the lead exposure that’s already occurred.
There was a time when the French were not so enamoured of the Obama administration’s policy on Syria. Now, President Hollande says “there is a new mindset”.
Bernie Sanders, America’s answer to Jeremy Corbyn, is giving Hillary Clinton a scare in the campaign to get the Democratic nomination for next years US presidential election.
Donald Trump is hiring. He’s hiring himself as President of the United States and the hundreds of people crowded into the school hall in Manchester, New Hampshire as his cheerleaders.
Gregory Russeau says he’s ready to die. He says that he is at peace, after thirteen years of waiting. On Thursday he will be executed.
British director Kwame Kwei-Armah brings a new musical about Bob Marley to Baltimore, weaving the themes of revolution and protest together at a time when the city is still healing after the death of Freddie Gray.