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Fiorina calls out media over ‘strangle’ coverage

“By laughing off a male questioner’s desire to strangle Carly Fiorina, Hillary Clinton and the Democrats have lost all credibility claiming to be a party that stands up for women”, said the statement.

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This is while a 54-percent majority of the survey participants said they have made up their minds on support for the former Clinton.

She did say, however, that vets should have more choice about their care, which could involve the department pioneering more partnerships with private sector facilities, so that no veteran has to wait weeks and months for care. GOP presidential hopeful Jeb Bush criticized Clinton and Democratic President Barack Obama as not believing the United States “has a leadership role to play” in foreign affairs. Now, that number is down to 43 percent, with another 32 percent saying they would support her “with reservations” and 14 percent saying they would support her only because she’s the nominee. Clinton said in response to a question that she does not now support a declaration of war against the Islamic State given the diffuse nature of the group and the potential costs.

Bernie Sanders will try to continue to inspire voters with his progressive populist message, in the hopes that his impassioned calls for fighting income inequality enable him to chip away at Clinton’s lead. Martin O’Malley comes in a distant third at 5 percent.

Schriock talked about the way Clinton’s policies would be good for women and families, while Clark explained why Clinton is best suited in particular to help veterans and keep a strong military.

“We need the kind of growth that reveals itself in bigger paychecks and more good jobs for American workers”, Clinton said. ‘I think he has his facts wrong about the two corporate jets, but I understand that he might be frustrated by that’.

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For the most part, primary debates probe at differences in philosophy and strategy among copartisans, or at fundamental ideological differences between Republicans and Democrats. Texas Sen. Ted Cruz stressed his commitment to “free-market principles”.

Hillary Clinton's marijuana policy could lead to regulation of the industry