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			 At a rally in West Virginia on Thursday night, the billionaire 
			businessman criticized Clinton for the vast sums of money that she 
			and her husband, former President Bill Clinton, accepted for the 
			Clinton Foundation, which he called a "scam." The Clintons have 
			dismissed criticisms of the charitable organization as politically 
			motivated. 
			 
			Trump also linked her with some of her husband's decisions when he 
			was president in the 1990s, like the NAFTA trade deal that opened up 
			trade among the United States, Mexico and Canada. Trump has vowed to 
			rewrite trade deals if elected on Nov. 8. 
			 
			"We have to win the general election. We cannot take Hillary Clinton 
			anymore. NAFTA was given to us by Clinton," Trump said. "We can’t 
			take any more of the Clintons." 
			 
			He put on a hard hat presented to him by the state's coal miners' 
			association and blasted Clinton for saying recently she would impose 
			clean-energy policies that would put coal miners out of business. 
			
			  Still, Trump faces an uphill climb to bring the party together. 
			 
			House of Representatives Speaker Paul Ryan, the top elected 
			Republican in the United States, said on Thursday he was not ready 
			to support Trump, a sign of lingering establishment concern about 
			the New Yorker's position on immigration and trade. 
			 
			But in a sign some Republicans are rallying around Trump, Nebraska 
			Governor Pete Ricketts, whose family has helped bankroll an 
			anti-Trump group, is set to endorse him on Friday. 
			 
			Former Texas Governor Rick Perry, who last year described Trump as a 
			"cancer on conservatism" while running against him for the 
			Republican nomination, told CNN he now supported him as well. 
			 
			Trump's effort to raise as much as $1 billion for his campaign and 
			the Republican Party for the general election is just getting 
			started and may not be able to rely on some major past sources of 
			financial support. 
			 
			One example of that is Theresa Kostrzewa, who raised money for 2012 
			nominee Mitt Romney and 2016 candidate Jeb Bush. She gave no 
			indication she would raise money for Trump. 
			 
			
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			"I'll be voting in November," she said. "Those are my plans." 
			 
			Trump emerged as the last man standing in the Republican 
			presidential race with a vow to disrupt the old order in Republican 
			Party politics, but is finding that in some respects, he needs the 
			old order. 
			 
			The Republican National Committee, which is trying to bring the 
			various warring factions together, said it anticipated a meeting 
			soon between Trump and Ryan. 
			 
			One opportunity could come next week, when Trump may visit 
			Washington, where his top backer on Capitol Hill, U.S. Senator Jeff 
			Sessions of Alabama, has been trying to get more lawmakers to 
			endorse him. 
			 
			But the message emanating from the Trump campaign is the same. 
			 
			While Trump did not mention Ryan in his Charleston speech, an 
			introductory speaker, the Rev. Mark Burns, made reference to it. 
			 
			"You know the reason why the establishment is afraid of Donald J. 
			Trump?" he said. "They're afraid because they can't control him." 
			 
			(Reporting by Steve Holland; Editing by Peter Cooney) 
			
			[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
			reserved.] 
			Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
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