Welcome to McClatchy’s Voter Survival Guide, an interactive presentation of daily events from one of the strangest presidential campaigns in modern history.
A front-page Newsweek report alleges that Donald Trump spent money doing business in Cuba during Fidel Castro’s presidency. The Republican nominee spent money on a consulting firm that traveled to the island to explore a potential business venture in 1998.
Trump has yet to respond to the report but campaign manager Kellyane Conway said “They paid money, as I understand, in 1998.”
Hillary Clinton was endorsed by 40 Republican and independent politicians and senior government officials, continuing a pattern of Republicans breaking from party ranks.
But the Democratic nominee is having trouble in Florida, a state Trump will likely need to win if he is to be successful in November.
The polls open nationally in 38 days. Let’s get started.
Trump may have violated the Cuban embargo
Documents show that Trump’s hotel company spent $68,000 in Cuba when it was against federal law to spend a dollar in the country without approval from the U.S. government.
The alleged expenditure was made in 1998, so Trump will not face any legal consequences for the expenditure because the statue of limitations has expired.
Conway appeared to admit that Trump broke the law by saying “they paid money” on The View Thursday morning but she later refuted that claim in a later Tweet.