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Donald Trump releases list of potential supreme court nominees – live Donald Trump releases list of potential supreme court nominees – live
(about 1 hour later)
9.22pm BST
21:22
Ben Jacobs
The Guardian’s Ben Jacobs has more on Donald Trump’s most recent financial declaration, which reveals that he holds bonds in companies he has attacked.
The filing demonstrates a number of interesting investments by Trump. Despite his frequent tirades against Oreo cookies for moving some production to Mexico and his pledge to boycott the popular cookie, Trump earned between $5,000 and $15,000 in interest on bonds in Mondelez, the holding company which owns Oreo. Trump also earned between $2,500 and $5,000 in interest in bonds in United Technologies Corporation, the owner of Carrier Air Conditioning. On the campaign trail in Indiana, Trump repeatedly attacked Carrier for moving manufacturing jobs overseas and out of the state.
Trump also made significant sums of money from the 16 books he has authored. His newest tome, Crippled America, earned the presumptive nominee between $1m and $5m, while The Art Of The Deal – which Trump has called his second favorite book after the Bible – netted him between $50,000 and $100,000.
The real estate mogul also reported that he made $49.3m from selling his share of the Miss Universe pageant as well as earning nearly $30m from his ownership of the Mar A Lago resort in Palm Beach.
Trump also had to list all 564 positions he holds outside the United States government, all linked to being President of Trump ICE LLC and president, director and chairman of Trump World Productions.
Related: Trump financial declaration reveals he holds bonds in companies he attacked
9.01pm BST
21:01
Our cup runneth over with anti-Donald Trump tweets from Texas supreme court justice Don Willett, who really, really seems disinterested in serving as a supreme court nominee under the hypothetical Trump administration.
"I just want to thank my coaches at Trump University summer basketball camp."—Kris Jenkins #NationalChampionship pic.twitter.com/Xrvk79ViWO
Low-energy Trump University has never made it to #MarchMadness. Or even to the #NIT. Sad! 🏀 pic.twitter.com/DWcfJOZkPu
8.55pm BST
20:55
Dan Roberts
Hopes of a joyous moment of unification as the party came together to fight Donald Trump took a nosedive this week after the most rancorous dispute yet erupted between supporters of rival candidates Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton.
The severity of the row – ostensibly over the allocation of delegates at a state-level Democratic convention in Nevada – took many observers by surprise, particularly after threats of violence were made by some Sanders supporters toward Democratic officials accused of bending the rules to favour Clinton.
But the unapologetic reaction of leaders on both sides of the dispute suggests the angry scenes in Nevada were not an isolated incident, and point to a degree of animosity that will not be easy to heal.
The Sanders camp vehemently rejects the notion that such tensions could turn ugly again in July, with the Vermont senator issuing a statement saying it was “nonsense” to suggest the campaign had a “penchant for violence”.
“There is not going to be any violence in Philadelphia, I guarantee you that,” the Sanders campaign manager, Jeff Weaver, told CNN after the party chair, Debbie Wasserman Schultz, appeared on air to accuse Sanders of “adding fuel to the fire” with his “unacceptable” response to the incident.
Yet the mere fact that these senior party figures are conducting their discussions via television studios rather than telephone calls speaks volumes about how little trust remains between them.
Related: Democrats face their own unity crisis amid Nevada convention fallout
8.00pm BST8.00pm BST
20:0020:00
#FF @justicewillett#FF @justicewillett
It's time to spill the beans on @heidiscruz:🔥🔥 SHE'S FABULOUS! 🔥🔥 pic.twitter.com/WcTEIYGUA5It's time to spill the beans on @heidiscruz:🔥🔥 SHE'S FABULOUS! 🔥🔥 pic.twitter.com/WcTEIYGUA5
7.46pm BST7.46pm BST
19:4619:46
Justice Willett also referred to Trump on Twitter as “Darth Trump”:Justice Willett also referred to Trump on Twitter as “Darth Trump”:
"We'll rebuild the Death Star. It'll be amazing, believe me. And the rebels will pay for it."—Darth Trump pic.twitter.com/y25LADg15J"We'll rebuild the Death Star. It'll be amazing, believe me. And the rebels will pay for it."—Darth Trump pic.twitter.com/y25LADg15J
And made a Star Trek /Trump Airlines joke:And made a Star Trek /Trump Airlines joke:
That time @WilliamShatner flew Trump Airlines. pic.twitter.com/ok8dF0BsOjThat time @WilliamShatner flew Trump Airlines. pic.twitter.com/ok8dF0BsOj
UpdatedUpdated
at 7.56pm BSTat 7.56pm BST
7.44pm BST7.44pm BST
19:4419:44
The Trump campaign has released thumbnail bios for each of his 11 potential Supreme Court picks.The Trump campaign has released thumbnail bios for each of his 11 potential Supreme Court picks.
(Donald Trump isn’t president yet, and so he does not get to nominate a Supreme Court justice...yet.)(Donald Trump isn’t president yet, and so he does not get to nominate a Supreme Court justice...yet.)
“The following list of potential Supreme Court justices is representative of the kind of constitutional principles I value and, as President, I plan to use this list as a guide to nominate our next United States Supreme Court Justices,” Trump said in a statement:“The following list of potential Supreme Court justices is representative of the kind of constitutional principles I value and, as President, I plan to use this list as a guide to nominate our next United States Supreme Court Justices,” Trump said in a statement:
Here’s a thumbnail roundup of the thumbnails:Here’s a thumbnail roundup of the thumbnails:
Steven Colloton of Iowa is a judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, a position he has held since President George W. Bush appointed him in 2003.Steven Colloton of Iowa is a judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, a position he has held since President George W. Bush appointed him in 2003.
Allison Eid of Colorado is an associate justice of the Colorado Supreme Court. Colorado Governor Bill Owens appointed her to the seat in 2006; she was later retained for a full term by the voters (with 75% of voters favoring retention).Allison Eid of Colorado is an associate justice of the Colorado Supreme Court. Colorado Governor Bill Owens appointed her to the seat in 2006; she was later retained for a full term by the voters (with 75% of voters favoring retention).
Raymond Gruender of Missouri has been a judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit since his 2004 appointment by President George W. Bush.Raymond Gruender of Missouri has been a judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit since his 2004 appointment by President George W. Bush.
Thomas Hardiman of Pennsylvania has been a judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit since 2007. Prior to serving as a circuit judge, he served as a judge of the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania since 2003.Thomas Hardiman of Pennsylvania has been a judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit since 2007. Prior to serving as a circuit judge, he served as a judge of the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania since 2003.
Raymond Kethledge of Michigan has been a judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit since 2008. Before his judicial service, Judge Kethledge served as judiciary counsel to Michigan Senator Spencer Abraham, worked as a partner in two law firms, and worked as an in-house counsel for the Ford Motor Company.Raymond Kethledge of Michigan has been a judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit since 2008. Before his judicial service, Judge Kethledge served as judiciary counsel to Michigan Senator Spencer Abraham, worked as a partner in two law firms, and worked as an in-house counsel for the Ford Motor Company.
Joan Larsen of Michigan is an Associate Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court. Justice Larsen was a professor at the University of Michigan School of Law from 1998 until her appointment to the bench.Joan Larsen of Michigan is an Associate Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court. Justice Larsen was a professor at the University of Michigan School of Law from 1998 until her appointment to the bench.
Thomas Lee of Utah has been an Associate Justice of the Utah Supreme Court since 2010. Beginning in 1997, he served on the faculty of Brigham Young University Law School, where he still teaches in an adjunct capacity.Thomas Lee of Utah has been an Associate Justice of the Utah Supreme Court since 2010. Beginning in 1997, he served on the faculty of Brigham Young University Law School, where he still teaches in an adjunct capacity.
William H. Pryor, Jr. of Alabama is a judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit. He has served on the court since 2004. Judge Pryor became the Alabama Attorney General in 1997 upon Jeff Sessions’s election to the U.S. Senate.William H. Pryor, Jr. of Alabama is a judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit. He has served on the court since 2004. Judge Pryor became the Alabama Attorney General in 1997 upon Jeff Sessions’s election to the U.S. Senate.
David Stras of Minnesota has been an Associate Justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court since 2010. After his initial appointment, he was elected to a six-year term in 2012.David Stras of Minnesota has been an Associate Justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court since 2010. After his initial appointment, he was elected to a six-year term in 2012.
Diane Sykes of Wisconsin has served as a judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit since 2004. Prior to her federal appointment, Judge Sykes had been a Justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court since 1999 and a Wisconsin trial court judge of both civil and criminal matters before that.Diane Sykes of Wisconsin has served as a judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit since 2004. Prior to her federal appointment, Judge Sykes had been a Justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court since 1999 and a Wisconsin trial court judge of both civil and criminal matters before that.
Don Willett of Texas has been a Justice of the Texas Supreme Court since 2005. He was initially appointed by Governor Rick Perry and has been reelected by the voters twice.Don Willett of Texas has been a Justice of the Texas Supreme Court since 2005. He was initially appointed by Governor Rick Perry and has been reelected by the voters twice.
7.38pm BST7.38pm BST
19:3819:38
More Twitter goodness from Texas supreme court justice Don Willett, who’s on Trump’s short list after making fun of the election cycle and by extension Trump:More Twitter goodness from Texas supreme court justice Don Willett, who’s on Trump’s short list after making fun of the election cycle and by extension Trump:
Can't wait till Trump rips off his face Mission Impossible-style & reveals a laughing Ruth Bader Ginsburg. pic.twitter.com/LieabD35zbCan't wait till Trump rips off his face Mission Impossible-style & reveals a laughing Ruth Bader Ginsburg. pic.twitter.com/LieabD35zb
#Election2016 is brought to you by the letters S, M, and H. pic.twitter.com/ymJLlJO3Mg#Election2016 is brought to you by the letters S, M, and H. pic.twitter.com/ymJLlJO3Mg
.@JusticeWillett,surprised, nervously shy about being on @realDonaldTrump SCOTUS list, says, "I'll circle back." pic.twitter.com/leRQeo2wMi.@JusticeWillett,surprised, nervously shy about being on @realDonaldTrump SCOTUS list, says, "I'll circle back." pic.twitter.com/leRQeo2wMi
7.34pm BST7.34pm BST
19:3419:34
Trump pick had recoiled from TrumpTrump pick had recoiled from Trump
Texas supreme court justice Don Willett is not only on Donald Trump’s short list to replace Antonin Scalia on the Supreme Court – he’s on Twitter – and he has publicly second-guessed Trump’s ability to appoint a supreme court justice.Texas supreme court justice Don Willett is not only on Donald Trump’s short list to replace Antonin Scalia on the Supreme Court – he’s on Twitter – and he has publicly second-guessed Trump’s ability to appoint a supreme court justice.
Donald Trump haiku—Who would the DonaldName to #SCOTUS? The mind reels.*weeps—can't finish tweet* pic.twitter.com/a326AP0mN1Donald Trump haiku—Who would the DonaldName to #SCOTUS? The mind reels.*weeps—can't finish tweet* pic.twitter.com/a326AP0mN1
UpdatedUpdated
at 7.35pm BSTat 7.35pm BST
7.33pm BST7.33pm BST
19:3319:33
Trump roster includes opponents of abortion, supporters of voter ID and 'religious freedom' lawsTrump roster includes opponents of abortion, supporters of voter ID and 'religious freedom' laws
The Trump list of justices includes six federal circuit judges and five state supreme court justices. Trump has previously mentioned at least two of the judges, Diane S Sykes of Wisconsin and Bill Pryor of Alabama, as potential Supreme Court picks.The Trump list of justices includes six federal circuit judges and five state supreme court justices. Trump has previously mentioned at least two of the judges, Diane S Sykes of Wisconsin and Bill Pryor of Alabama, as potential Supreme Court picks.
Pryor is a George W Bush appointee who has written that Roe v Wade “created—out of thin air—a constitutional right to murder an unborn child” and who has upheld a Georgia voter ID law.Pryor is a George W Bush appointee who has written that Roe v Wade “created—out of thin air—a constitutional right to murder an unborn child” and who has upheld a Georgia voter ID law.
Sykes had also been mentioned as a potential Supreme Court pick by Wisconsin governor Scott Walker. She ruled in favor of the state’s voter ID law and backed federal funding for anti-gay groups that engage in discrimination.Sykes had also been mentioned as a potential Supreme Court pick by Wisconsin governor Scott Walker. She ruled in favor of the state’s voter ID law and backed federal funding for anti-gay groups that engage in discrimination.
Click through for basic details on the judges:Click through for basic details on the judges:
Steven M Colloton, US court of appeals judge, eighth circuit in Des Moines, IowaSteven M Colloton, US court of appeals judge, eighth circuit in Des Moines, Iowa
Allison H. Eid, justice, Colorado supreme courtAllison H. Eid, justice, Colorado supreme court
Raymond W Gruender, US court of appeals judge, eighth circuit in St Louis, MissouriRaymond W Gruender, US court of appeals judge, eighth circuit in St Louis, Missouri
Thomas M Hardiman, US court of appeals judge, third circuit in Pittsburgh, PennsylvaniaThomas M Hardiman, US court of appeals judge, third circuit in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Raymond M Kethledge, US court of appeals judge, MichiganRaymond M Kethledge, US court of appeals judge, Michigan
Joan L Larsen, justice, Michigan supreme courtJoan L Larsen, justice, Michigan supreme court
Thomas R Lee, justice, Utah supreme courtThomas R Lee, justice, Utah supreme court
William H Pryor, US court of appeals judge, AlabamaWilliam H Pryor, US court of appeals judge, Alabama
David R Stras, associate justice, Minnesota supreme courtDavid R Stras, associate justice, Minnesota supreme court
Diane S Sykes, US court of appeals judge, seventh circuit, WisconsinDiane S Sykes, US court of appeals judge, seventh circuit, Wisconsin
Don R Willett, justice, Texas supreme courtDon R Willett, justice, Texas supreme court
7.09pm BST7.09pm BST
19:0919:09
The Associated Press releases the list of Trump’s potential Supreme Court picks:The Associated Press releases the list of Trump’s potential Supreme Court picks:
Trump’s picks include Steven Colloton of Iowa, Allison Eid of Colorado and Raymond Gruender of Missouri.Trump’s picks include Steven Colloton of Iowa, Allison Eid of Colorado and Raymond Gruender of Missouri.
Also on the list are: Thomas Hardiman of Pennsylvania, Raymond Kethledge of Michigan, Joan Larsen of Michigan, Thomas Lee of Utah, William Pryor of Alabama, David Stras of Minnesota, Diane Sykes of Wisconsin and Don Willett of Texas.Also on the list are: Thomas Hardiman of Pennsylvania, Raymond Kethledge of Michigan, Joan Larsen of Michigan, Thomas Lee of Utah, William Pryor of Alabama, David Stras of Minnesota, Diane Sykes of Wisconsin and Don Willett of Texas.
Trump said in March he planned to release the list to ease concerns about his conservative credentials in the Republican primary.Trump said in March he planned to release the list to ease concerns about his conservative credentials in the Republican primary.
He said then the list would include judges “that everybody respects, likes and totally admires” and “great conservative judges, great intellects, the people that you want.”He said then the list would include judges “that everybody respects, likes and totally admires” and “great conservative judges, great intellects, the people that you want.”
More to come...More to come...
7.00pm BST7.00pm BST
19:0019:00
Trump releases list of potential Supreme Court nomineesTrump releases list of potential Supreme Court nominees
BREAKING: Presumptive GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump releases list of 11 potential nominees to U.S. Supreme Court.BREAKING: Presumptive GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump releases list of 11 potential nominees to U.S. Supreme Court.
More to come...More to come...
Trump is being impressively modest. Jesus had 12 people on his list.Trump is being impressively modest. Jesus had 12 people on his list.
UpdatedUpdated
at 7.07pm BSTat 7.07pm BST
6.55pm BST6.55pm BST
18:5518:55
Former governor sees Trump hurt by preponderance of 'ugly women'Former governor sees Trump hurt by preponderance of 'ugly women'
Former Pennsylvania governor Ed Rendell, a Democrat, has spoken with the Washington Post about Trump’s claims that he can flip the Keystone state to the Republican column, which has not voted for a Republican for president since 1988.Former Pennsylvania governor Ed Rendell, a Democrat, has spoken with the Washington Post about Trump’s claims that he can flip the Keystone state to the Republican column, which has not voted for a Republican for president since 1988.
Trump’s argument is that he can win over blue-collar voters in the old industrial corridor along the Delaware River.Trump’s argument is that he can win over blue-collar voters in the old industrial corridor along the Delaware River.
Rendell thinks Trump might win a few such votes but will lose far more among women. His analysis has to do with the proportion of ugly to attractive women in America:Rendell thinks Trump might win a few such votes but will lose far more among women. His analysis has to do with the proportion of ugly to attractive women in America:
“Will he have some appeal to working-class Dems in Levittown or Bristol? Sure,” said Ed Rendell, the former Pennsylvania governor and Philadelphia mayor, who won landslides in the suburbs. “For every one he’ll lose 1½ , two Republican women. Trump’s comments like ‘You can’t be a 10 if you’re flat-chested,’ that’ll come back to haunt him. There are probably more ugly women in America than attractive women. People take that stuff personally.”“Will he have some appeal to working-class Dems in Levittown or Bristol? Sure,” said Ed Rendell, the former Pennsylvania governor and Philadelphia mayor, who won landslides in the suburbs. “For every one he’ll lose 1½ , two Republican women. Trump’s comments like ‘You can’t be a 10 if you’re flat-chested,’ that’ll come back to haunt him. There are probably more ugly women in America than attractive women. People take that stuff personally.”
The AP adds:The AP adds:
Rendell didn’t immediately return requests for comment. Rendell’s comments have stirred up controversy in the past. In 2010, he said the U.S. had “become a nation of wusses” following the postponement of a Philadelphia Eagles game due to a snowstorm.Rendell didn’t immediately return requests for comment. Rendell’s comments have stirred up controversy in the past. In 2010, he said the U.S. had “become a nation of wusses” following the postponement of a Philadelphia Eagles game due to a snowstorm.
Read the full Washington Post piece, which explores Trump’s potential appeal in suburbs that had been trending Democratic, here.Read the full Washington Post piece, which explores Trump’s potential appeal in suburbs that had been trending Democratic, here.
Are there more ugly men in the United States, or attractive men? cc @GovEdRendellAre there more ugly men in the United States, or attractive men? cc @GovEdRendell
UpdatedUpdated
at 6.57pm BSTat 6.57pm BST
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18:38
Trump invests in companies he criticized for 'moving to Mexico'
Guardian politics reporter Ben Jacobs is digging through Donald Trump’s latest personal financial disclosure form and finds the candidate holds investments in at least two companies that he has criticized for moving some operations to Mexico.
Ben also turns up decent book royalties (although Trump’s >$1m for Crippled America does not measure up to the >$5m Hillary Clinton drew for Hard Choices) and Public Integrity’s Dave Levinthal flags a healthy return on an investment in tobacco stocks:
Donald Trump is a bondholder in Mondelez, the parent company of Oreo cookies which he boycotts pic.twitter.com/EVWeUEn94x
Trump also is a bondholder in United Technologies Corporation, the parent company of Carrier, which he has attacked pic.twitter.com/0a8DQLMuFu
Trump claims at least $1 million in income from his most recent book, Crippled America, this year pic.twitter.com/zTwe7BaPvp
New financial disclosure shows @realdonaldtrump made 6-figures during last year from tobacco stock income pic.twitter.com/lQdoBFU0IO
6.29pm BST
18:29
Trump ranks Ferguson, Oakland among world's most dangerous places
In a profile of Donald Trump in the New York Times magazine, journalist Robert Draper catches the candidate watching footage on Fox News of the aftermath of a bombing attack in Baghdad. Trump murmurs, “Boy, this Isis.”
“I asked Trump if he had ever been to Iraq,” Draper writes:
“Never!” he said, sounding horrified by the thought.
“What’s the most dangerous place in the world you’ve been to?”
He contemplated this for a second. “Brooklyn,” he said, laughing. “No,” he went on, “there are places in America that are among the most dangerous in the world. You go to places like Oakland. Or Ferguson. The crime numbers are worse. Seriously.”
It was a stark reminder of what set Trump apart from every other politician in recent memory who had occupied his current position: how little of the world he had seen beyond the archipelago of boardrooms, golf courses and high-rise hotels he inhabited, how utterances that by now would have torpedoed a more normal campaign continued to roll off his tongue with impunity.
Read the full piece here.
5.56pm BST
17:56
Sanders’ top surrogate in the senate says the Democratic challenger is winning the fur-and-feathers vote:
.@SenJeffMerkley: Even the animal kingdom is recognizing the strength of @BernieSanders' ideas #AMR @MSNBC
There’s supporting evidence:
5.46pm BST
17:46
Donald Trump will require vice presidential prospects to turn over their tax returns as part of the vetting process, NBC News reports. Trump himself has refused to make his tax returns public.
More from @KatyTurNBC on Trump's VP tax request: pic.twitter.com/hdTlGEWPfr
5.35pm BST
17:35
Clinton vote lead edges above 3m
Hillary Clinton’s popular-vote lead on Bernie Sanders has edged past 3m: it’s now 12,971,797 for Clinton to 9,924,944 for Sanders, according to the Real Clear Politics tally, for a margin of 3,046,853.
Sanders gained four pledged delegates on Clinton last night, thanks to his nine-point win in Oregon, according to AP estimates. But Clinton leads Sanders by 279 pledged delegates and by 763 delegates when you include superdelegates:
5.17pm BST
17:17
Clinton raked in royalties, speaking fees before launching bid
The Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce paid Hillary Clinton $150,000 for one speech last year and co-sponsored two other speeches by Clinton in Canada, according to a personal financial disclosure form released Tuesday by the Democratic presidential candidate.
Clinton additionally earned more than $5m in royalties in 2015 from her second memoir, Hard Choices, and she earned about $1.5m in speaking fees before launching her candidacy halfway through the year, according to an Associated Press analysis of the personal disclosure form.
The form also lists speeches Bill Clinton gave in 2015 in exchange for payments from a Swiss-based bank, a tech firm, an investment firm and a trade and lobbying group. Bill Clinton also drew an undisclosed income from consulting work with a Dubai-based charitable foundation that in the past has paid him $5.6m, according to tax returns.
The Clinton campaign released the form hours after likely presidential rival Donald Trump released his own form, boasting about how many pages it was and claiming that it showed he was worth $10bn. The forms are crude tools for indicating net worth because income is reported in ranges and certain property holdings, retirement accounts and other assets and potential liabilities are excluded.
“Despite the fact that I am allowed extensions, I have again filed my report, which is 104 pages, on time,” Trump said in a statement upon releasing his form.
Clinton spokeswoman Christina Reynolds ridiculed Trump for congratulating himself for releasing the form.
“Despite Donald Trump’s boasting, submitting his personal financial disclosure form is no breakthrough for transparency,” Reynolds said. “The true test for Donald Trump is whether he will adhere to the precedent followed by every presidential candidate in the modern era and make his tax returns available, as Hillary Clinton has done.”
The Associated Press reports further disclosures in Clinton’s financial disclosure form:
In all, Clinton made at least 94 appearances before corporate and other special interests between 2013 and 2015, earning more than $21.6 million for her services. A review of federal records, regulatory filings and correspondence by The Associated Press showed that almost all the 82 corporations, trade associations and other groups that paid for or sponsored Clinton’s speeches have actively sought to sway the government — lobbying, bidding for contracts, commenting on federal policy and in some cases contacting State Department officials or Clinton herself during her tenure as secretary of state.
Bill Clinton listed a February 2015 appearance in Nashville, Tennessee, for UBS Wealth Management Americas — a Swiss international bank that Hillary Clinton also spoke to in July 2013. Among his other speech clients in 2015 were Apollo Management Holdings, L.P., an investment firm that his wife also spoke to; the tech firm Oracle Corp.; and the National Association of Manufacturers, a trade and lobbying group.
Hillary Clinton’s disclosure also shows that her husband made an undisclosed amount of money last year in consulting roles for two international interests — the Dubai-based Varkey GEMS Foundation and Laureate Education Inc., a global for-profit education firm. Bill Clinton ended his relationship with Laureate last year after earning $16.5 million as the operation’s honorary chancellor, according to previously released Clinton tax records. Bill Clinton also has made more than $5.6 million in an honorary role for the GEMS foundation.
4.26pm BST
16:26
Kentucky clerk declares all votes are in, including elusive 'ghost precincts'
Dan Roberts
Anyone wondering why the result of the Kentucky primary has not been officially declared by Associated Press, which is usually the semi-official arbiter of these things, might want to look to Kenton County, a suburb of Cincinnati in the north of the state, writes Guardian Washington bureau chief Dan Roberts:
According to the county’s “cumulative report”, only 103 of its 107 precincts have reported. This is what is showing on the results maps used by The Guardian and others, which rely on AP data. It may be also be why people are reluctant to declare a state-wide win for Hillary Clinton, who is just 1,923 votes ahead of Bernie Sanders at the state level.
What is confusing however, is that the Kentucky Secretary of State’s office preliminary records show that all the Kenton County precincts are in, but lists only 105.
I just spoke to the county clerk in Kenton, Gabrielle Summe, who appears to have cleared up the discrepancy and says all the primary election votes are in.
She blames the delay on a computer glitch, caused primarily by the fact that Kenton includes two “ghost” precincts in its total, which do not have any voters in the them and are not counted by the state. Ghost precincts are usually tiny strips of land in between areas where people live that are created in an effort to clean up the electoral map by, for example, making House and Senate districts contiguous.
Another tiny precinct only has a handful of voters, none of whom showed up, but is confusing the system by recording a zero. The fourth missing “precinct” is not actually a precinct at all, rather an amalgam of all the absentee voters, who have now been allocated to the respective home precincts.
To make matters more confusing there was also a legal dispute over the residency status of one of the candidates in a local election, which meant its results have had to be redacted pending a court challenge.
All in all, Summe tells the Guardian “all my results are in” and is insistent there are no missing votes still out there that could affect the state-wide result. Given that Clinton was the winner locally, it seems all but impossible this county could be the source of sufficient votes to make a difference.
4.19pm BST
16:19
Ivanka Trump: dad 'not a groper'
A day after Melania Trump confirmed that husband Donald Trump is “not Hitler,” Trump daughter Ivanka tells CBS News that he’s not a groper either.
He’s “not a groper. It’s not who he is,” Ivanka Trump told “CBS This Morning”.
A New York Times piece published at the weekend quoted some women from Trump’s past as saying that the businessman had made unwanted or aggressive sexual advances. One said he gave her a “gross” kiss on the lips. Another said Trump was “groping me under the table” during a weird dinner business meeting. The article also quoted women as saying that Trump is obsessed with women’s bodies and talks about them a lot.
Ivanka Trump on Wednesday denied that Trump frequently comments on women’s bodies and appearances. Which means among other things that she was not a regular listener to the Howard Stern show in the late 1990s and early 2000s.
3.49pm BST
15:49
The Latino vote and Donald Trump
From Florida to Nevada, Arizona to Iowa, and countless other states beyond, there is evidence that the sleeping giant of the Latino vote is stirring, begins a new Guardian report on whether Latinos might swing the general election against Trump:
Trump’s favorability ratings with Hispanic voters are running at historic lows, while he faces an increasingly well-organized nationwide campaign to oppose him.
A Guardian exploration of three key swing states and survey of national Hispanic outreach groups has found that the presumptive Republican nominee faces an uphill struggle to repair the damage caused by his threats to deport all 11 million undocumented immigrants and build a wall with Mexico.
Related: Will Latino loathing of Trump drive a voter movement to swing the election?
On the other hand... “despite the taco bowl embarrassment, despite his provocative remarks about “illegals” and murderous rapist Mexicans, there is a body of Hispanic Americans who remain among his most impassioned fans,” writes Ed Pilkington:
Take Luz Helena, a 40-year-old from Colombia who has lived for 17 years as a naturalized American citizen in Toms River, New Jersey.
She told the Guardian: “I love and support Donald Trump100%.”
But wasn’t she upset by the candidate’s pledge to build a wall along the Mexican border? Not at all, she said.
“When we came to this country we did it right. We paid our taxes and followed its laws. But everywhere you look, my people are abusing the law. They are illegal but they are having kids left and right because they want the benefits of living here.”
Read the full piece here:
Related: Latinos for Trump: anatomy of an unlikely voter bloc
Updated
at 3.53pm BST
2.20pm BST
14:20
Hello, and welcome to our live-wire coverage of the 2016 race for the White House. Vermont senator Bernie Sanders won the Oregon primary by about nine points on Tuesday night to slightly close his delegate gap with Hillary Clinton, who narrowly edged Sanders in the primary in Kentucky, according to the state’s secretary of state. The overall delegate picture for the Democrats changed little – they’re still headed for California.
Read our news coverage of primary night here:
Related: Bernie Sanders takes Oregon primary while Clinton claims Kentucky
Fox News host Megyn Kelly interviewed Donald Trump last night, confronting him about retweeting someone who called her a bimbo. He asked to be excused – in her heart, not from the room:
Related: Donald Trump pleads ignorance to Megyn Kelly over 'bimbo' tweets: 'Did I say that?'
The National Republican senatorial committee is out with a new attack ad against Clinton – and the Democratic senatorial candidates who would appear on the ballot with her – featuring whooshing names of past Clinton scandals and proclaiming her “the living embodiment of everything people hate about politics”.
Thanks as always for reading and please join us in the comments.