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Bernie Sanders is bringing his populist message to Los Angeles
Sanders argued that gender drives numerous attacks against his opponent for the 2016 Democratic presidential nomination. So he doesn’t see much point in holding off on endorsements until candidates make the right promises: “I don’t know that that worked out so well, those commitments”.
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As the polling for presidential candidates on both sides of the aisle continues, it’s interesting, but not alarming, to note the slippage Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) is experiencing in certain sectors. “I am ready for a president who’s got some experience”, says worldwide Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers president Tom Buffenbarger, who endorsed Clinton in 2008 and (while his union hasn’t yet endorsed) is supporting her again for 2016.
“I was so excited to have the opportunity to get a lot of people together and make it happen”, says Cochran, who has gotten her information on Sanders from the campaign website and other online resources. When asked on ABC’s “This Week”, Sanders said, “In those countries, health care is the right of all people“.
Sanders said he has known Hillary for “25 years” and that he admires, respects, and likes her, but “she and I have very different points of view on a number of issues”. “Of course they want something”. Sanders is a member of Congress who doesn’t shy away from the term socialist, when many of his colleagues prefer to use “progressive”.
“Can we actually prevail over a billionaire, or the billionaire class?” “Time will tell. I think we can”.
“Look, I’m not going to tell you that this is a flawless agreement”.
Hillary Clinton’s free-falling public image poll numbers have impelled the often rigid and robotic presumed Democratic nominee to adopt a more aggressive tack, according to The Washington Post.
Sanders said he “wouldn’t frame it that way”.
One of the reasons we have a sharing economy is that it is a simplified mechanism for entrepreneurs to deliver services to consumers absent the hassles of regulation faced by traditional business models.
I think that the Citizens United decision, which allows billionaires, as Trump mentioned, to pour huge amounts of money into campaigns, to allow the Koch brothers to spend more money – an extreme right-wing family – to spend more money in this election cycle than either Democrats or Republicans, is a disaster for American democracy.
“It’s so easy to be critical of an agreement which is not ideal”, he said in an interview CBS News “Face the Nation” program.
The debate left him feeling good about the Republicans’ chances next year, Gingrich said.
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Sanders’ Los Angeles rally comes on the heels of a weekend swing through Seattle and Portland, Ore., in deeply blue states that have not voted for a Republican presidential candidate since 1984.