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Fiorina says no “ill will” for Clinton

Bernie Sanders’, I-Vt., presidential bid.

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“I’m very attracted by his message and his style and that he has held pretty much strong on his beliefs and the world is catching up with him”, Turner said. “She should have stood up to him”. Democrats under age 45 support the socialist senator, and Sanders also leads among independents who plan to vote in the Democratic primary.

“We are extremely, extremely humbled by the support of Sen”.

Clinton has since modified her tone substantially on the issue, saying Tuesday that the status quo was “failing to keep faith with our veterans”, according to CNN.

The move comes as a surprise – and a blow for Clinton.

“He’s a Muslim. He’s a black Muslim”, the man said, to which Fiorina responded, “Well, time to do something different in many ways”.

Listening to a man say he wanted to “strangle” Republican presidential candidate Carly Fiorina at a New Hampshire campaign event Tuesday, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton laughed, made a joke – and did not say anything to distance herself from the statement.

Fiorina’s campaign quickly seized on the comments, attacking what they see as a press corps that treats Clinton with kid gloves.

Clinton was also asked if she would support a declaration of war agaisnt radical islamic terrorists.

In agreement with Behar’s comments, Faris said Clinton needs to stand up for the “only other female” in the presidential election cycle.

The favoured Republican bugbear against Clinton, the attack on the USA consular station in Benghazi in 2012, was notable by its comparative absence, though Ben Carson got a few early applause for the line, “When I look at somebody like Hillary Clinton, who sits there and tells her daughter and a government official that this was a terrorist attack and then everybody else that it was a video, where I come from they call that a lie”.

“I’m not sure that makes sense in fighting a threat that is as diffuse and networked as this threat is”, Clinton said.

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“That’s what she and her socialist friend Bernie Sanders are going to advocate for … and I’m going to stop it.” he added. “This has nothing to do with the secretary”. Only one in four Republicans don’t believe she couldn’t possibly win next November; almost half say that about Sanders. Sixty-three percent of them prefer Clinton.

Clinton pushes back against GOP on veterans' health issues