“If we’ve got the right presidential candidate, we’ve got a good shot of taking back the Senate”.
Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Clinton insisted Thursday that she doesn’t understand what rival Sen. “You are going to be part of my administration”, she vowed.
Earlier at a rally in Indianola, Iowa, Clinton repeatedly referenced Sanders by name and questioned whether his ideas could ever become reality.
Emily’s List communications director Marcy Stech wrote that Sanders’ “attacks on Planned Parenthood are rooted in the same exact type of political calculation Republicans make when advancing their extreme agenda”.
Groups like the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, the National Education Association and the American Federation of Teachers all endorsed Clinton with a top-down process that some members took issue with, according to the Intercept.
She said people “who are so adamantly opposed” to abortion rights “have no regard for what women’s lives are like”.
“I think she’s a smart lady and I think she has a lot of experience and she could really do a lot of great things for us”, she said.
“I think it would be a mistake to offer normalized relations”, Clinton said, saying her commitment to the Iran nuclear deal is strong.
Clinton’s health plan is aimed at lowering prescription drug costs and targeted fixes to the existing Affordable Care Act.
In the first primary state, the polls all show Bernie Sanders ahead – but even here the polls are a freaky mixture, with wildly different margins.
“Sanders doesn’t talk very much about foreign policy, but when he does, it raises concerns because sometimes it can sound like he hasn’t really thought it through”, Clinton said. They also overestimated Mrs. Clinton’s skill as a candidate.
Clinton had led most public opinion polls in Iowa.
Another 65.8% said they do not plan to see the newly released movie critical of Clinton’s role in the attack on the US embassy in Libya, titled 13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi.
Sanders, an independent who caucuses with Democrats on Capitol Hill, has far less backing among the party establishment.
On Friday night, however, New Hampshire Sen.
Only one Democrat has ever won the nomination without winning at least one of the first two states: Bill Clinton during his 1992 White House run. She thanked those supporters who were with her and told those in the audience who were still “shopping” that she hoped she could win them over before the primary.