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Democratic Party a “Dead Carcass” for Stifling Debate
On Saturday night, during the Democratic presidential debate, Clinton alleged Trump was “becoming ISIS’ best recruiter”.
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Sanders also framed the drug policy issue in “the context of race and policing”, Farai Chideya reported for FiveThirtyEight. “Let’s create an America that works for all of us, not the handful on top”, said Bernie Sanders, who is seeking Democratic presidential nominee.
“ABC and CBS are the ones that chose to put the debates on a Saturday night”, Palmieri said, naming the networks that had broadcast the previous two debates.
“How the government chooses to treat and incarcerate is very different based on different drugs.”
While the Democrats united against Trump, Sanders clashed at length with Clinton over how to tackle extremism, opposing her call for a no- fly zone over Syria and for focusing on ousting that country’s President Bashar al-Assad.
Accused of actively stealing Clinton campaign data, the Sanders campaign was closed out of its own DNC-hosted data collections last week.
“It’s just another Hillary lie”, Trump said. “They are going to people showing videos of Donald Trump insulting Islam and Muslims in order to recruit more radical jihadists”. It came as Clinton had solidified her standing atop the field, shaking off a rocky start and the controversy about her use of private email at the State Department.
In New Hampshire, the state where the debate was conducted, Sanders holds a strong high single/low double-digit lead over Clinton – although Clinton leads by a convincing 25 points nationally. Clinton struck back, reminding Sanders that he “voted for regime change” in Libya. “Do you think that’s a coincidence?” When speaking of the post-Paris attacks White House strategy to fight ISIL, she said: “We now finally are where we need to be”.
All three candidates stressed working more closely with Muslim-American communities to tackle radicalism at home – a sharp difference from the rhetoric of some Republican candidates.
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Clinton also vowed not to raise taxes on middle-class Americans if elected next November, questioning the affordability of some of Sanders’ proposals such as creation of a single-payer healthcare system and tuition-free college.