Hillary Clinton contended Thursday that Donald Trump has spent his entire campaign "offering a dog whistle to his most hateful supporters," citing as evidence the recent endorsement of his candidacy in an official publication of the Ku Klux Klan.
"They said it's about preserving white identity, and they placed their faith and hope in him," she said, noting the endorsement was written under his slogan of "Make America Great Again."
"You have to ask," she added, "do any of us have a place in Trump's America?"
Ted Cruz called Donald Trump a coward during the bitter Republican presidential primary last spring and snubbed him over the summer at the Republican National Convention by withholding his endorsement.
But that was then.
On Thursday, Cruz was on the road campaigning with GOP vice presidential hopeful Mike Pence.
Donald Trump unveiled a new TV ad Thursday that seeks to capitalize on the FBI inquiry into new emails that may be related to Hillary Clinton’s use of a private server while secretary of State.
The ad is set to air in Florida and North Carolina, both bitterly contested battleground states as the presidential race moves into its final few days.
The 30-second spot contains several misleading statements. Here's a quick fact-check.
An unlikely duo is working to tamp down talk from a handful of House Republicans who say Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton should be impeached if she's elected president.
Some House Republicans have in recent days echoed statements from Republican nominee Donald Trump about a potential "constitutional crisis" if Clinton's emails are investigated by the FBI while she's in office. The FBI announced recently it is reviewing emails that may be related to Clinton which it didn't have during its initial investigation.
House minority leader Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) and Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Vista) have each urged House Republicans to take the impeachment issue off the table.
Hillary Clinton will hold a final election rally Monday evening in Philadelphia with President Obama, First Lady Michelle Obama, former President Bill Clinton and their daughter, Chelsea.
Long a politically important swing state, Pennsylvania is seen as a firewall Clinton needs to hold to win. She and Donald Trump both have visited the state repeatedly over the past few months, and Trump's wife, Melania, is speaking in the state Thursday.
Both Clinton and Trump are scheduled to hold events in New York as they wait for results Tuesday evening.
Republican vice presidential nominee Mike Pence declined three times to answer the question of whether Paul D. Ryan should be reelected as House speaker, during an interview with National Journal.
“My respect for Paul Ryan is boundless,” he said twice. “I’m not a member of the House Republican conference anymore. I wouldn’t presume upon what the members of the conference choose.”
A spokesman for Pence later told the Journal that Pence would support Ryan if he were still serving in the House.
Between requests for prayers for the sick and a notice for an upcoming chastity luncheon, a newsletter from a Catholic church in San Diego's Old Town that doubles as an election day polling site included a flier that told parishioners they’ll go to hell if they vote for Democrats.
Two Sundays later, the message had changed: Satan was working through former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, it said.
The Oct. 16 bulletin from the Immaculate Conception Catholic Church contained a flier in English and Spanish that cited five legislative policies — support for abortion, same-sex marriage, euthanasia, human cloning and embryonic stem cell research — that it said will doom politicians and their supporters to eternal damnation.
Melania Trump will return to the campaign trail Thursday for her first public speech since the summer, when she spoke at the Republican National Convention and came under criticism for plagiarizing some lines from a previous Michelle Obama speech.
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump's campaign told CBS News that Melania Trump will speak for up to 25 minutes on her husband's proposed policies for women, families and children, and about what kind of first lady she’d be.