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WASHINGTON (AP) — The Latest on the presidential campaign ahead of the Democratic and Republican nominating conventions (all times EDT):

Updated 2:35 p.m.: FBI Director James Comey says he is glad to testify before Congress about his decision not to prosecute Hillary Clinton, because, “I think the American people want to know about this” case and the reasons behind his decision.

Still the four-plus hours of testimony were not always easy for Comey – beyond the sometimes sharp questions he received from Republicans on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee.

Comey said of the testimony, “it’s a pain,” in some cases literally: “I’ve had to go to the bathroom for about an hour.”

Lawmakers expressed sympathy but did not immediately adjourn the hearing or schedule a break.

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Updated 1:50 p.m.: It was a desk, not an attic.

FBI Director James Comey corrected that detail in earlier testimony before a House committee in which he said that Gen. David Petraeus had hidden classified information in the insulation in his attic.

Comey later in the day said it had been in a desk as the agency pursued its case.

Testifying about Hillary Clinton’s emails on Thursday, Comey was questioned about the case of Petraeus in which he was prosecuted for mishandling classified information.

Petraeus pleaded guilty last year to knowingly sharing binders of classified information with his biographer, a woman with whom he was having a sexual relationship. The Justice Department made clear that the retired Army general knew the material was top secret when he divulged it and had lied to the FBI about it.

Comey made the surprising disclosure about the Petraeus case during questioning.

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Updated 12:33 p.m.: FBI Director James Comey is emphatically denying that he coordinates his decision not to prosecute Hillary Clinton with the White House or anyone else.

Comey says no one influenced his decision in any way.

Republican Rep. John Mica of Florida said the timing of Comey’s announcement was suspicious and compared the decisions “choreography” to the Broadway musical, “Hamilton.”

The decision came just a week after former President Bill Clinton met privately with Attorney General Loretta Lynch and a few days after Clinton testified for 3½ hours to the FBI.

Clinton campaigned with President Barack Obama a few hours after Comey’s announcement.

Mica said, “This is rapid fire. My folks have questions.”

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Mica said he was “not a conspiracy theorist,” but the timing raises questions.

Comey said the agency tried hard to make a case against Hillary Clinton but ultimately concluded there was no case.

Comey tells the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee that, “We went at this very hard to see if we could make a case.”

Updated 12:30 p.m.: House Speaker Paul Ryan says he has written to FBI Director James Comey asking him to release all unclassified findings of the investigation into Hillary Clinton’s email use.

Ryan said of Clinton: “She has just been proven to be dishonest about what she said she did, and she’s been proven to mishandle it very recklessly.”

Speaking to reporters on Thursday, Ryan reiterated that he has asked Director of National Intelligence James Clapper to bar Clinton from receiving classified briefings for the rest of the campaign.

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Ryan says “it stands to reason that individuals who are ‘extremely careless’ with classified information should be denied further access to that type of information.”

Ryan added that he was confident that Donald Trump could handle classified information.

Updated 11:47 a.m.: FBI Director James Comey is suggesting that it’s possible Hillary Clinton may not have been able to identify classified markings on emails.

Comey’s investigation found that there were 113 emails that were sent or received by Clinton containing classified material, contradicting Clinton’s previous statements.

Comey says under questioning from a Republican lawmaker that they asked Clinton about three emails that bore “C” markings indicating that the documents are classified. He says there’s a question of whether Clinton was “sophisticated enough” to understand what the C markings meant.

North Carolina Rep. Mark Meadows says a reasonable person would think someone who is the secretary of state would understand what that means. Meadows says after Clinton’s time in the Senate and at the State Department, “that’s hard to believe.”

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Updated 11:40 a.m.: White House spokesman Josh Earnest says nothing in FBI Director James Comey’s report on Hillary Clinton’s emails causes President Obama to “reconsider his enthusiastic support for her campaign.”

Earnest accused Republicans of politicizing Congress’ oversight role by hauling Comey before a House panel to explain his recommendation to not bring charges against Clinton.

The White House had sidestepped questions about the investigation while it was ongoing, citing the need to preserve the Justice Department’s independence. With the probe now closed, Earnest said the results of the investigation hadn’t had any impact on Obama’s determination about who should be the next president.

Updated 11:41 p.m.: House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi is dismissing the emergency hearing House Republicans called with FBI Director James Comey about Hillary Clinton’s handling of emails.

Pelosi told reporters Thursday: “We have an investigation of the investigation of the investigation. How long can this go on?”

The minority leader spoke as Comey testified before the House Oversight committee on why he did not recommend charges against Clinton over her home email server. Comey said his team found no evidence that she lied under oath or broke the law by discussing classified information in an unclassified setting.

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Updated 11:19 a.m.: The chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee says he is going to refer Hillary Clinton’s testimony before the House Benghazi Committee to the FBI to investigate whether she lied to Congress.

Rep. Jason Chaffetz of Utah cited comments by Clinton in which she said she did not send or receive any emails marked as classified.

Clinton testified for nearly 11 hours last fall before the Benghazi panel, which was investigating the deadly 2012 attacks that killed four Americans, including U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens. Clinton was secretary of the state at the time and now is the presumptive Democratic nominee for president.

FBI Director James Comey told Chaffetz at a hearing Thursday that he had not reviewed the testimony because it has not been referred to him by Congress.

Chaffetz told Comey he would have a referral “in the next few hours.”

Updated 11:12 a.m.: FBI Director James Comey is backing up Hillary Clinton’s long-stated reason for setting up a private email server when she became President Barack Obama’s secretary of state.

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Comey tells a House committee that the FBI’s “best information” is that Clinton set up the private server “as a matter of convenience.” Those comments are in line with what Clinton has told the public.

Comey says under questioning from lawmakers that the investigation did not establish that Clinton was “particularly sophisticated” with the use of electronic information. That prompts Florida Congressman Ron DeSantis to reply, “Good grief.”

Updated 10:54 a.m.: FBI Director James Comey says he did not hold Hillary Clinton to a different standard when he recommended no charges over her use of a private email server while she was secretary of state.

Comey is telling a House committee that the FBI tries very hard to apply the same standard “whether you are rich or poor, white or black, old or young, famous or not known at all.”

Comey told the panel that Clinton did email classified material and used multiple devices during her four years as secretary of state, contradicting her public statements.

Republicans are pointing out that a rank-and-file government worker who used an unclassified email system to conduct classified government business would have been charged with a crime.

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Updated 10:49 a.m.: FBI Director James Comey says then-CIA Director David Petraeus hid material in the insulation in his attic as the agency pursued its case.

Testifying about Hillary Clinton’s emails on Thursday, Comey was questioned about the case of Petraeus in which he was prosecuted for mishandling classified information.

Petraeus pleaded guilty last year to knowingly sharing binders of classified information with his biographer, a woman with whom he was having a sexual relationship. The Justice Department made clear that the retired Army general knew the material was top secret when he divulged it and had lied to the FBI about it.

Comey made the surprising disclosure about the Petraeus case during questioning.

Updated 10:35 a.m.: FBI Director James Comey says of Hillary Clinton there is, “no basis to conclude that she lied to the FBI.”

Comey is being questioned by the Republican-led House oversight committee on his decision not to recommend charges against the Democratic presidential candidate for blending personal and official business on a home email server while she was secretary of state.

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Updated 10:34 a.m.: FBI Director James Comey is telling the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee that his investigation found evidence of “great carelessness” by Hillary Clinton’s handling of classified information but no evidence that she or her staff illegally discussed classified information.

Comey says there was only one precedent in the past 100 years for prosecuting on a “gross negligence” item and “no reasonable prosecutor” would bring this case.

Updated 10:24 a.m.: Donald Trump is blaming the media for the uproar over his comments complimenting former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein as a killer of terrorists.

Trump sought to explain his comments a Tuesday night speech in North Carolina when he met with House Republicans on Thursday.

According to Rep. Kevin Cramer of North Dakota, Trump said he was very critical of Saddam “saying he’s a very, very bad guy, evil guy. And I wake up and I look at the media and they say I love Saddam Hussein.”

Cramer said Trump used the incident as an “an example of how his words were twisted or taken out of context.”

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Updated 10:10 a.m.: The chairman of the House committee probing why Hillary Clinton was not indicted this week is telling FBI Director James Comey that the decision is a mystery.

The Utah Republican, who chairs the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, tells Comey that the “fact pattern” he laid out in a scathing report this week about Clinton’s use of a private email server does not match his conclusion not to indict her.

Chaffetz says he can’t explain why there was no consequence for Clinton when an average American would likely be in handcuffs.

He adds that Clinton’s blending of private and official business on an unsecured private email server “not an innocent mistake.”

“There does seem to be two standards,” Chaffetz said.

Updated 10:00 a.m.: Hillary Clinton is rolling out a plan that would crack down on companies that don’t pay contractors and workers for their labor.

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Clinton’s plan would aim to ensure that small businesses get paid faster and have greater legal protections if they are repeatedly stiffed by large companies.

Clinton traveled to Atlantic City, New Jersey, on Wednesday to criticize Trump’s business practices and point to instances in which he failed to pay contractors for their work on his hotels. Clinton said what Trump did in Atlantic City is exactly what he would do to the American economy.

Updated 9:57 a.m.: Donald Trump is getting mixed reviews from House Republicans.

Pennsylvania Rep. Charlie Dent said after Thursday’s Capitol Hill meeting that Trump, “has a lot of work to persuade many Americans, including myself, that he is able to lead this great country.”

Illinois Rep. Adam Kinzinger said there was a lack of enthusiasm in the room — “You could feel it”

Still nagging at some lawmakers is Trump’s praise earlier in the week of former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein’s prowess at killing terrorists. The U.S. listed Iraq during the Saddam years not as an opponent of terrorism, but as a state sponsor of it.

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“I’m not a Never Trump guy, I’ve said I want to get there, I’m a Republican and I want to support the nominee. But things like the Saddam Hussein comment are not helping me get there,” Kinzinger said.

Another Illinois congressman, John Shimkus, said Trump “talked about how much he was able to raise in the last month, I guess. And how it’s important to get united.” Shimkus added that Trump issued, “no new information.”

Updated 9:52 a.m.: Hillary Clinton plans to campaign next week with Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine, a popular lawmaker and foreign policy expert who is among the candidates under consideration to be her vice presidential pick.

Clinton’s campaign said the two would appear together in northern Virginia on July 14 at a Democratic Party of Virginia event. According to a news release, they will talk about building a stronger America and stress why “Donald Trump’s divisive agenda would be dangerous for America.”

Virginia is a key general election battleground state.

Other potential vice presidential prospects include Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, a favorite among party progressives and Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julian Castro of Texas, a rising star in the Democratic Party.

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Updated 9:31 a.m.: Georgia Rep. Tom Price says Donald Trump delivered a “great unifying speech” to House Republicans and hit on key GOP themes.

Emerging from the Thursday morning meeting, Price said Trump talked about repealing the health care law, reducing regulatory burdens, tax reform and getting the Supreme Court to “be one that is more reflective of the values of the country.”

Price said rank-and-file Republicans were receptive.

Trump was meeting with congressional Republicans at Republican headquarters on Capitol Hill.

Updated 9:19 a.m.: Protesters are targeting Donald Trump, who was meeting on Capitol Hill with Republicans, and GOP senators locked in tough re-election contests.

As Trump arrived on Thursday, protesters held signs with headshots of several Republicans, including New Hampshire Sen. Kelly Ayotte, Pennsylvania Sen. Pat Toomey and Wisconsin Sen. Ron Johnson.

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“Make America Great Again” hats were photo-shopped to their heads and the bottom of the signs reads “Party of Trump.”

The protesters also targeted Speaker Paul Ryan and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz.

Ayotte had indicated she had no plans to attend the meeting with Trump.

Updated 8:52 a.m.: Donald Trump has arrived on Capitol Hill for his meeting with congressional Republicans.

Trump’s motorcade pulled into an alleyway behind the Republican National Committee building around 8:50 a.m. The presidential candidate didn’t speak with reporters as he entered the building, but offered a quick wave from behind the window of his SUV.

Trump was meeting with rank-and-file House Republicans before a separate session with GOP senators.

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Updated 7:20 a.m.: House Oversight Committee Chairman Jason Chaffetz says he has plenty of questions for James Comey Thursday, but he doesn’t question Comey’s integrity.

The Utah Republican congressman tells MSNBC that Comey “is a man of great integrity, that’s why it’s mystifying” that Comey he recommended no charges against Hillary Clinton despite the FBI’s findings that classified information traveled through her homebrew email server.

Chaffetz’s committee is hearing from Comey Thursday about the investigation. Attorney General Loretta Lynch has accepted Comey’s recommendation, igniting an inferno of criticism that what would clearly be a criminal infraction for others went unpunished for the Democratic presidential candidate and former secretary of state.

On NBC’s “Today” show, Chaffetz said he “absolutely” would have had the FBI director before his committee even if the decision had been to move toward an indictment.

Updated 6:50 a.m.: House Speaker Paul Ryan wants the director of national intelligence to deny Hillary Clinton the type of classified briefings given to presidential nominees before the general election.

Ryan says that in light of the FBI’s findings from its investigation of Clinton’s email practices while secretary of state, barring her from classified briefings “certainly constitutes appropriate sanctions.”

The Wisconsin Republican says in a letter to Director of National Intelligence James Clapper that if Clapper rejects the request, Ryan wants him to provide his rationale for granting Clinton access to such information “despite the FBI’s findings.”

FBI Director James Comey said on Tuesday there was no evidence Clinton or her aides willfully or intentionally mishandled classified information and that “no reasonable prosecutor” would pursue such a case. But he cited them for being “extremely careless” and he contradicted many of the explanations Clinton has long put forward.