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2 more staffers removed from Sanders’ campaign over data breach
Sanders apologized to Clinton and to his supporters during Saturday night’s Democratic presidential debate, hosted by ABC News.
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With the men’s room significantly closer to the debate stage, Mrs Clinton’s male opponents, Bernie Sanders and Martin O’Malley, made it back more quickly.
The Democratic Debate in New Hampshire started with a potentially explosive situation, pitting the Clinton campaign against the Sanders camp over the data breach. And over the weekend, Sanders said that the timing of the primary debates – which included several little-watched weekend events – was meant to “protect” Clinton.
“It’s pretty clear from what Hillary Clinton said last night that she thinks things are just fine”, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said. “Our punishment, of course, should not discourage Senator Sanders from continuing to campaign using the low-frequency radios we have provided him, which have a transmitting radius of up to fifty meters”. Sanders, speaking on ABC’s This Week, additionally referred to as the DNC’s decision to briefly block his access to the voter knowledge a “total overreach”. Now her lead is down to 16 points – 46 to 30.
Her above-the-fray posture in the debate signalled Clinton’s confidence, just weeks before the first votes in Iowa, that neither of her Democratic rivals would prove a significant obstacle on her march to the nomination.
Sanders said he had lost an election in Vermont for a gun-control stance and Clinton said she had backed gun-control measures. He said the two weren’t fired “because we are still assessing the situation”.
With both candidates in the state campaigning on Tuesday, Christie also took an opportunity during the interview to tweak Rubio over their New Hampshire face-off.
“Yeah, regime change is easy, getting rid of dictators is easy”, Sanders said.
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But Palmieri admitted that the former secretary of state “didn’t have a particular video in mind”. While proponents of a no-fly zone believe it will help domestic rebel groups in their fight to topple Assad and defeat the Islamic State, opponents say such a move could backfire and lead to unpredictable consequences such as emboldening terrorist groups. But to turn that level of early energy into a national victory, Sanders must find a way to expand his appeal in a race in which economic uncertainty is increasingly taking a back seat to security concerns. “There’s an obvious problem and I think it’s disgusting”. Clinton challenged Sanders on how he would pay for those proposals, suggesting he’d pass on the costs to states and middle class Americans.