Arab Times

Trump, Clinton get closer to showdown

Democratic front-runner ‘playing the woman card’: tycoon

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WASHINGTON, April 27, (Agencies): Bolstering his grip on the Republican primaries, Donald Trump prepared Wednesday for a general election showdown with Hillary Clinton, accusing the Democratic frontrunne­r of “playing the woman card” in her presidenti­al campaign.

Trump swept five states in Tuesday’s Northeast primaries, bringing him tantalizin­gly close to securing the Republican nomination against Texas Sen Ted Cruz and Ohio Gov John Kasich. Clinton, meanwhile, is now 90 percent of the way to her party’s nomination after four solid victories of her own.

Trump, the Republican businessma­n, pushed forward with his charge that Clinton is “playing the woman card,” telling CNN’s “New Day” in a telephone interview Wednesday that “she does have the woman card” but said that “a lot of women don’t like Hillary, despite the card.”

Clinton said during her Tuesday night rally in Philadelph­ia that Trump had accused her of playing the “woman card,” telling supporters, “if fighting for women’s health care and paid family leave and equal pay is playing the ‘woman card,’ then deal me in.”

The Republican race now turns to Indiana, where next week’s primary marks one of Cruz’s last chances to slow Trump and push the race toward a contested convention. While Trump does need to keep winning in order to stay on his narrow path to the GOP nomination, he declared himself the party’s “presumptiv­e nominee” after US government sources said on Tuesday.

The FBI is expected within days to write to the White House explaining why Tuesday’s results rolled in.

“It’s over. As far as I’m concerned it’s over,” he declared. The real estate mogul now has 77 percent of the delegates he needs.

Trump emerged with more than 50 percent of the Republican votes in Pennsylvan­ia, Connecticu­t and Maryland, and scored over 60 percent in Delaware and Rhode Island. Similarly, Clinton won convincing­ly in four of the five contests, scoring 56 percent in Pennsylvan­ia and 63 percent in Maryland — the two biggest contests of the night. Her rival, Bernie Sanders, won the Rhode Island primary with 55 percent of the vote.

Trump planned to deliver a foreign policy speech in Washington and then campaign in Indiana. The address at a downtown hotel is the first in a series of speeches the Republican frontrunne­r is expected to give in the coming weeks, all with the goal of easing Americans’ concerns about his readiness for the presidency.

Likewise, Clinton was eager to turn her attention to Trump. While Clinton advisers say they won’t underestim­ate Trump, as many of his vanquished Republican rivals did, her campaign sees opportunit­ies to not only energize Democrats in an effort to keep him out of the White House but also appeal to Republican­s turned off by the brash billionair­e.

“If you are a Democrat, an independen­t or a thoughtful Republican, you know that their approach is not going to build an America where we increase opportunit­y or decrease inequality,” the agency cannot share the unlocking mechanism with other government agencies, Apple or other third parties, said the Clinton said of the GOP candidates.

Trump’s victories came in Connecticu­t, Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvan­ia and Rhode Island. Clinton ceded only Rhode Island to Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders.

Sanders, in an interview with The Associated Press, conceded he has a “very narrow path and we’re going to have to win some big victories.”

In the Republican race, Cruz and Kasich are desperatel­y trying to force a convention fight. The challenger­s have even taken the rare step of announcing plans to coordinate in upcoming contests to try to minimize Trump’s delegate totals.

Effort

But that effort did little to stop Trump from a big showing in the Northeast, where he picked up at least 105 of the 118 delegates up for grabs. He now has 950 of the 1,237 delegates he needs to secure the nomination.

Cruz spent Tuesday in Indiana, where Kasich’s campaign has withdrawn in an attempt to give the Texas senator a clear path.

“Tonight this campaign moves back to more favorable terrain,” Cruz said during an evening rally in Knightstow­n, Indiana.

Yet there’s no doubt the GOP is deeply divided by Trump’s candidacy. In Pennsylvan­ia, exit polls showed nearly 4 in 10 GOP voters said they would be excited by Trump becoming president, but the prospect of the real estate mogul in the White sources, who asked to remain anonymous.

Several US government sources said the FBI contractor that unlocked the shooter’s House scared a quarter of those who cast ballots in the state’s Republican primary.

The exit polls were conducted by Edison Research for The Associated Press and television networks.

Democrats award delegates proportion­ally, which allowed Clinton to maintain her lead over Sanders even as he rattled off a string of wins in recent contests. According to the AP count, Clinton now has 2,141 delegates while Sanders has 1,321.

That count includes delegates won in primaries and caucuses, as well as superdeleg­ates — party insiders who can back the candidate of their choice, regardless of how their state votes.

Sanders has vowed to stay in the race until voting wraps up in June. He continues to raise millions of dollars and attract big crowds, including Tuesday night in West Virginia, where he urged his supporters to recognize that they are “powerful people if you choose to exercise that power.”

Barring a dramatic turn of events, Clinton has now cleared the way to become the Democratic nominee in the November presidenti­al election, which would make her the first woman in US history to reach that milestone.

The former secretary of state won four out of five primaries Tuesday in Connecticu­t, Delaware, Maryland and the night’s big prize, the battlegrou­nd state of Pennsylvan­ia.

She conceded only the small state of Rhode Island to rival Bernie Sanders in a near sweep that gives her an almost insurmount­able delegate lead. phone was a foreign entity and did not give US authoritie­s details of the mechanism. Without that, the FBI could not share it even if it wanted to, sources said.

Reuters reported on April 13 that the unnamed contractor had sole ownership of the method it used, making it unlikely that the government could share it.

A day later, the FBI warned Apple of a separate flaw in its iPhone and Mac software, the company told Reuters on Tuesday. (RTRS)

‘FBI gave tip on April 14’:

The FBI informed Apple Inc of a vulnerabil­ity in its iPhone and Mac software on April 14, the first time it had told the company about a flaw in Apple products under a controvers­ial White House process for sharing such informatio­n, the company told Reuters on Tuesday in Washington.

The Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion told the company that the disclosure resulted from the so-called Vulnerabil­ity Equities Process for deciding what to do with informatio­n about security holes, Apple said.

The process, which has been in place since 2010 and was revamped in 2014, is meant to balance law enforcemen­t and US intelligen­ce desires to hack into devices with the need to warn manufactur­ers so they can patch holes before criminals and other hackers take advantage of them. (RTRS)

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