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| |  |  | Donald Trump may have turned 70 earlier this week, but today his campaign turns one. When he descended down that escalator with wife Melania, the expectations for his primary campaign against 16 other Republicans, including sitting governors and senators, could not have been lower, ABC's SHUSHANNAH WALSHE points out. But he beat all expectations and never dulled the explosive language he put on display that very day. His positions may have changed over the year, but his rhetoric, style, and self-promotion skills have remained 100 percent Trump. |  | Bernie Sanders, still officially in the race, will address supporters tonight via a livestream video message at 8:30 PM ET. Will he end his campaign or tell them the revolution continues? Or does he do both, but shift his focus to helping Clinton defeat Trump? |  |  |  | The Clinton campaign is flexing its muscles on the airwaves. Starting today, the presumptive Democratic nominee will being running three general election television ads in eight states across the country: Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Nevada, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio and Virginia. The ads are part of a massive, eight-figure, six-week television buy, according to a campaign official. Included in the three new spots that will begin airing today, is the campaign's recently-released "Who We Are" ad, which uses video of Donald Trump mocking a disabled reporter to frame the election as "a choice about who we are as a nation." The campaign will also air two autobiographical-style ads, neither of which mention the presumptive Republican nominee, ABC's LIZ KREUTZ notes. http://abcn.ws/28H4HC4 |  |  |  | Analysis -- ABC's Rick Klein |  | The latest Trump endorser forced to wonder what Trump is thinking is the NRA, which didn't anticipate a certain Tweeting presidential candidate in writing its post-Orlando script. It's not clear what specific policy Donald Trump is pushing in his not-yet-scheduled meeting with the NRA. It's not clear if the NRA knows what he's up to in pushing for suspected terrorists to be denied access to guns. It's also not clear that the Senate's decision to hold votes on gun control Thursday is directly connected to the pressure applied by Trump. But what is clear is that Trump – despite his half-threat to "do this alone" on the campaign trail – will have outsized influence on national debates over the next five months, at the very least. His unpredictability, along with the more predictable populist streak he flashes so often, won't exist by itself, no matter who endorses his candidacy. |  |  |  | Donald Trump issued a harsh directive for fellow members of his party: Be quiet or I'll be forced to lead alone. Speaking in the historic Fox Theater in Atlanta, Georgia, Trump appeared to be fed up with leadership of the party he will likely lead into the November election. "You know, the Republicans, honestly folks, our leaders, our leaders have to get tougher. This is too tough to do it alone. But you know what, I think I'm going to be forced to. I think I am going to be forced to, our leaders have to get a lot tougher," he began. He added, icily, "And be quiet. Just please be quiet. Don't talk, please be quiet." Trump has had a very tenuous relationship with many other Republicans. ABC's CANDACE SMITH has more. http://abcn.ws/25Ynf21 |  |  |  | This email was sent to bamsdum.xiomi@blogger.com
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