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In November, People Could Be Voting Against – Not For – Trump And Clinton

The appeal comes as the Vermont senator saw a drop off in fundraising last month, his campaign has begun to lay off hundreds of staffers and Clinton is shifting her campaign staff to general election swing states. “Among Democratic-leaning voters who… prefer Sanders to win the party nod, only 13 percent have a favorable view of Trump, compared to 86 unfavorable, according to a Washington Post-ABC News national poll earlier this month”.

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Interest levels in the race between Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton have spiked in the past week or so now that both candidates have made stops in the Hoosier state.

Hillary probably can’t win just by relying on voters who actually like her-there’s also so much misogyny baked into the DNA of this country that there will probably never be enough of those kinds of voters to carry her to victory. “I don’t think you are qualified if you’ve supported virtually every disastrous trade agreement, which has cost us millions of decent-paying jobs”.

Despite filling her speech with lines attacking her Republican counterparts, Clinton closed by calling for more bipartisanship. “If we win IN, it’s over”, Trump, who leads most polls IN the state, told supporters.

“We are going after Hillary Clinton”, Trump added.

A senior aide, Paul Manafort said on CBS’s “Face the Nation” Sunday that the Trump campaign has meetings this week about working “with leaders of the Republican Party and various committees to help raise money for them”.

“She’s a strong person – she’s going to have to be able to take it”, Trump said. Jeff Sessions of Alabama and two House committee chairmen. “He is playing you for a chump”, Cruz said to one of the supporters. Bernie and his campaign shouldn’t try to discredit the first woman with a viable shot at the presidency – especially when she has more votes than anyone in the race.

With 73 percent of precincts reporting, Sanders has been declared the victor, leading Clinton 53.2 to 46.8 percent, according to Associated Press.

Bernie Sanders has brought in about $26 million in April in his primary challenge to Hillary Clinton, marking one year on Sunday in his insurgent bid for the Democratic nomination.

Not purposely, of course. That means Clinton and Trump could each choose the other path: drumming up enthusiasm against the other candidate.

But the Republican front-runner says that he’ll use Sanders’ sound bite calling Clinton unqualified later in the campaign. Sanders would need to win 65 percent of the remaining pledged delegates to pull ahead of Clinton on that front.

On the Democratic side, Bernie Sanders is also hoping the Democrats don’t pick their nominee before they meet in Philadelphia in July, but that’s even more remote than for the GOP.

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The incident also fueled a long-held belief in the Sanders camp and among his allies that the DNC was stacking the deck in favor of Clinton.

Bernie Sanders Indiana Statehouse