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Hillary Clinton burns Donald Trump with excellent reply to ‘crooked’ tweet

“I can’t tell you who grateful I am to the people of MA who sent me here to wade into these fights”. But you also ought to be willing to throw a punch. “But nobody says that she doesn’t know how to throw a punch”.

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In an interview with Politico, Clinton said earlier this week that Warren is “qualified” for any role including VP.

“I will support whatever decision Bernie has to make”, said Rod Halvorson, the Sanders campaign National Delegate from Minnesota.

More than 12 million voters cast their ballots for Bernie Sanders during the primaries, which is still more than 3.7 million short of Hillary Clinton. Many supporters took to her Facebook page with profane comments, calling her a “sell out” for not endorsing Sanders.

Warren explained, “I thought that the primary was really important and it was an opportunity for Democrats to get out there and show this is what it means to be a Democrat… And for me, that’s what this is all about”.

Clinton plans to campaign in Green Bay next week with Obama.

Clinton has repeatedly said she chose “not to keep” some 30,000 emails her lawyers deemed personal, which has been widely interpreted as meaning she deleted the personal emails.

The endorsement and meeting further fuels speculation that Clinton will tap Warren as her running mate.

Warren has recently issued a string of tweets mocking and denouncing Donald Trump, the presumptive GOP presidential nominee, as unqualified to sit in the Oval Office.

“He is a threat economically to this country”, she said.

Congressman Ami Bera, the only Indian-American in the current Congress, said Clinton would be the next United States president.

“I believe he can win in November”, Moore said. It’s a person who is an insecure money-grubber who cares about nothing but himself.

Sanders told reporters that the NY businessman “makes bigotry and discrimination the cornerstone of his campaign” and would be a “disaster” as commander in chief.

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Once bitter rivals in the 2008 primary, Obama and Clinton worked to unify Democrats to defeat John McCain in that year’s general election.

US President Barack Obama walks with Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders through the Colonnade for a meeting in the Oval Office