Brett McGinness

USA TODAY

The Trump campaign's cast of thousands got a little bigger this morning, with Breitbart co-founder Stephen Bannon coming in as campaign CEO and Kellyanne Conway being added as campaign manager. Don't let the titles confuse you; campaign chair Paul Manafort is still in charge, probably! (Although this is kind of how things started out with Lewandowski's ouster.) Meanwhile, the roles of campaign boss, campaign overlord and campaign vizier have yet to be filled.

Also in today's FTR: The FBI hands over classified documents related to the Clinton email investigation, Breitbart joins the ranks of the poll spinners and voting booths will soon become the next Google Hangout. Let's go!

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Breitbart now part of poll-manipulation plot

According to Zip, the new question and answer smartphone app, 84% of its users agree that the polls for Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton are rigged. (Though the question doesn't specify exactly who the polls are rigged for, we're going to assume that they're not rigged against Clinton, who's riding an 18-poll win streak.) The question of skewed, biased or deliberately rigged polls is pretty serious, so conservative news/politics website Breitbart is jumping into the polling business. “It’s an open secret that polls are often manipulated and spun to create momentum for a particular candidate or issue,” said Alex Marlow, the editor-in-chief of Breitbart News. He promised that Breitbart's results would deliver the results "without the mainstream media filter.”

The results of the first survey? Clinton leads by 5 among likely voters in a four-way race, which puts it right about in the middle of what the past week's worth of surveys have said. In other words, the poll-rigging conspiracy goes way, way deeper than anyone had suspected. (BTW, welcome to the mainstream media cabal, Alex! Check in with Cameron at the registration desk to learn the secret handshake.)

We lost track of what sequel number this is

Much like the "American Pie" film series, the Clinton email scandal somehow keeps churning out new episodes. The latest: Congressional Republicans have received documents from the FBI which summarize the now-closed investigation into Hillary's private email server. Last month, FBI Director James Comey recommended that Clinton not be charged in the matter. “Consistent with our commitment to transparency with respect to the FBI’s investigation of former Secretary of State Clinton’s use of a personal email server, the FBI is providing certain relevant materials to appropriate congressional committees to assist them in their oversight responsibilities in this matter,'' the FBI said in a statement Tuesday.

The likelihood that we'll see any of the documents is extremely low -- they're all classified as secret -- but Republicans hope the documents will reveal sufficient ground to call for a new investigation by the Justice Department. Specifically, they're saying Clinton's testimony at the Benghazi hearings last October is at odds with the FBI's findings. Among critics of the move is Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), who says there's "little legitimate purpose" to the document handover, and fears that classified information will be leaked for political purposes.

Making the voting pie higher

More people are Googling "voter registration" this year than in 2012, according to Google. (Either that, or more people are Googling "voltron theme song lyrics" and getting sidetracked by Google autocomplete.) Data shows that nearly all states with a 200%-plus increase are blue states -- California, New York, Vermont, Maine and Massachusetts -- with West Virginia as the only red state. However, the data doesn't indicate which party is drawing interest from Google users. (Plus, our winner-take-all system pretty much renders your presidential votes moot. Sorry, guys.) More significantly, searches on voter registration information is up more than 100% since the last election in six battleground states: Pennsylvania, Ohio, Iowa, New Hampshire, Virginia and Colorado.

The GOP, meanwhile, is working to drum up Hispanic support for Trump. Hey, quit laughing; Hispanics still support Trump in similar numbers to Mitt Romney at this point in 2012 (which is to say, in the low 20s). The first video of the social media campaign features RNC Director of Hispanic Communications Helen Aguirre Ferré criticizing the Obama administration's foreign policy -- and notably not mentioning Trump until the final 12 seconds of the video.

More from the campaign trail

Clinton has big leads in Virginia, Florida (USA TODAY OnPolitics)

Trump on Milwaukee unrest: "We have to obey the laws or we don't have a country" (Milwaukee Journal Sentinel)

Republican attorney: Bernie's fundraising email for state senate candidate broke campaign finance law (Burlington Free Press)

Trump: Hillary wanted a border wall. Clinton: Nuh uh, I only wanted a fence (Politifact)

Roger Ailes isn't helping with debate prep, says Trump campaign (USA TODAY OnPolitics)

Clinton doctor: Hillary healthy enough to serve as president and/or compete in UFC 202 (USA TODAY)

Jill Stein to appear on CNN town hall Wednesday, showing utter disregard for those with electromagnetic hypersensitivity (USA TODAY OnPolitics)

Don't like Trump, Clinton or alcohol? We have good news for you​​

The Prohibition Party will put candidate Jim Hedges on the ballot this November in Arkansas, Colorado and Mississippi, and perhaps a few other states as well. In the party's platform: linking congressional pay to the minimum wage, ending birthright citizenship, fighting climate change ... oh, and banning alcohol, tobacco, marijuana and gambling.