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O’Malley blasts Clinton over death penalty

“It’s not what the base of the Democratic Party wants”, Greenberg told the Huffington Post.

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According to newly released communications, on the night of the attack, Clinton, then USA secretary of state, released a statement which read: “Some have sought to justify the vicious behavior as a response to inflammatory material posted on the Internet”.

He also highlighted the death penalty – which Clinton on Wednesday said needs careful review and has been applied inappropriately, but that she still supports it – and surveillance programs. “If you’re looking for someone to say what is wrong with America, I’m not your candidate. I think we have to make America greater”.

The comments themselves were a not-too-disguised reference to two of her rivals: Vermont independent Sen.

There’s plenty to criticize about Sanders’ wobbly gun record and his tortured explanations of it, not to mention the absurdity of the loudest shouter in the room coming out against yelling and screaming.

Officials rummaging through Clinton’s private server came across the emails between her and Obama, which touched on a range of topics that include Benghazi, Libya, and even the lack of emojis on Clinton’s cellphone, The New York Times reported Friday.

But she’s going to let the banks fail now.

The House voted late Tuesday to revive the bank, whose charter expired June 30. As anyone who closely followed that contest can attest, the oppo research deep into the two candidates’ pasts and the dark insinuations about pretty much everything about both of them were far more vicious and negative than anything we’ve seen between the Clinton and Sanders camps. “It became a political football for ideological or political reasons”.

Mrs. Clinton added, “I do not favor abolishing it, however, because I do think there are certain egregious cases that still deserve the consideration of the death penalty, but I’d like to see those be very limited and rare, as opposed to what we’ve seen in most states”.

Clinton has long backed the death penalty – saying in her 2000 run for Senate that it had her “unenthusiastic support” and maintaining that position in her 2008 run for president.

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Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton has repeatedly said she was not running for Obama’s third term, and has notably broken with the president on several major issues, including the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP), a trade deal she helped broker while serving in the Obama administration. He also supports dramatically overhauling or eliminating the Export-Import bank, saying it provides unnecessary government aid to multi-national corporations.

Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders speaks to guests at the Jefferson Jackson Dinner