NewsOne this week visited Hillary for America headquarters in New York City's Brooklyn Heights community to meet five Black millennials working on the campaign.

Now that Biden has decided not to run, leaders are flocking to front-runner Hillary Clinton. To be sure, an endorsement from top elected officials during primary elections usually signifies who will be the Democratic and Republican presidential nominee.

Just like the Democratic National Committee (DNC), the RNC refuses to schedule a debate solely on the issue of racial justice. Activists affiliated with the #BlackLivesMatter network and Campaign Zero had asked the two parties to add a formal racial justice debate to their schedules.

A Clinton aide confirmed the agreement for NewsOne in an email statement, saying that her campaign will no longer accept contributions from federally registered lobbyists or PACs for private prison companies.

Washington Post congressional reporter Paul Kane tweeted an apology to his 10,000 followers late Monday after editors mistakenly published a story headlined "Biden to launch presidential campaign," according to Politico.

National

Presidential candidate Jim Webb, the former Senator of Virginia, shared his discontent with the Democratic debate.

The current Republican front-runner didn't spare any of the candidates during his live tweets on Hillary Clinton's credibility, Bernie Sanders' views on gun laws, and more. He also found ways to brand himself by retweeting supporters who literally watched his tweets instead of the actual debate on CNN.

Tuesday night's highly anticipated democratic debate brought burning questions to the five candidates that took the Las Vegas stage, but no one question held more potential to boost (or break) a campaign than an inquiry about Black lives in America -- Do Black Lives Matter?

After tweeting that Obama was not a "real" Black president, Rupert Murdoch on Thursday apologized in an apparent attempt to save face.

Is Ben Carson victim blaming by saying he would attack the Oregon shooter instead of just "standing there?"

News One Exclusives

Should the Black Lives Matter movement host/sponsor a presidential debate/forum to see where candidates stand on our issues?