Hannity's Headlines E-Newsletter
Newspapers Keep Hillary Scandal Off the Front Page
In a not-so-surprising report by Newsbusters, it turns out that "four of the country's largest newspapers... kept the latest developments in Hillary Clinton's growing email scandal off the front page" of their papers on Wednesday while one publication kept it out entirely.
The New York Times, Washington Post, LA Times and USA Today all participated in covering up the major news that a presidential candidate and former Secretary of State could be part of a criminal investigation and might face multiple felony charges.
In fact, USA Today's print edition ignored the story completely and instead, their front page highlighted a story about the New York Jets.
Can the mainstream media be any more biased in their coverage?
One Candidate Could Risk it All
For the 17 candidates currently running for the GOP nomination, most are risking a small amount of their personal wealth and a large amount of their personal legacy. For candidates like George Pataki, who's trying hard to leverage his experience as governor of New York, is facing his last plausible candidacy. For one candidate, everything is at risk.
Kentucky GOP rules prevent a candidate from running for more than one seat and this has posed an immediate problem for Senator Rand Paul. By the end of next week Kentucky GOP leaders will need to select their candidate for the Senate. The Kentucky GOP could change the rules but there are legal and other costs associated with that. Among the main costs is that Kentucky will need to change their presidential primary from May to March in an effort to prevent Paul from appearing on the same ballot twice.
In the end, Paul seems to be pushing forward with his bid to be president but it would be fair to say that he's got a lot more on the line than most of his peers.
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