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How Donald Trump handed Hillary Clinton the “woman card” and the election
Twenty-eight percent of registered voters and 69 percent of strong Republicans have an extremely negative view of Clinton, while 16 percent of registered voters and 51 percent of strong Democrats have an extremely positive view of Clinton.
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Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders will be busy Monday hosting three rallies in Indiana – Evansville, Fort Wayne and Indianapolis – before Tuesday’s primary election.
Speaking to the Detroit NAACP annual dinner Sunday night, Clinton didn’t mention Sanders at all, instead she focused on her likely Republican opponent, attacking Donald Trump by name.
“In Indiana, Trump is positioned to corral all the delegates which will be a big prize toward winning the nomination outright”.
Trump is more toxic within his own party than Clinton is in hers. He suggested that his margin among independents would propel him to victory, with or without a united Republican Party, due to the millennial voters who support Bernie Sanders.
He said a prime target for flipping superdelegates will be those in states where he has soundly defeated Clinton.
Sanders is calling on super-delegates to cast their votes “in line with the people of their states”.
In a press release sent to WHAS11 News, Sanders campaign officials say he will discuss tuition-free education, combating climate change and universal health care. IN will send 92 delegates to the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia in July.
While Clinton’s supporters are much more divided on what Sanders should do, a sizable 28 percent of Clinton’s supporters agree that Sanders should stay in the race through the convention.
Sanders is also calling Clinton’s fundraising “money laundering”, showing no signs of giving up so far. The former secretary of state also raised $9.5 million for down-ballot Democratic candidates, as part of a joint fundraising program in which Sanders hasn’t participated. Sixty-six percent (66%) would vote for Trump, but 10% would vote for Clinton instead.
Clinton also delivered a speech Sunday to the NAACP in Detroit. Currently Clinton has 2,176 including 510 superdelegates, while Sanders has 1,400 including 41 superdelegates, according to CNN’s tally.
In the end, this poll probably says more about the candidacy of Hillary Clinton than Donald Trump.
Sanders said he thinks he is “entitled” to pick up many superdelegates from such states.
“It’s hard, it’s not impossible”, Sanders said on CBS’s “Face the Nation” of his increasingly bleak challenge to Clinton.
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Democratic presidential hopeful Bernie Sanders said he raised $25.8 million in April, well shy of his eye-popping totals of recent months.