Hillary Clinton appears in Denver, Boulder
I think you’re not going to be able to get people to come out of the shadows if you say if they come out of the shadows then you’re going to deport them.
Clinton’s plan would ultimately pull significant numbers of United States ground troops into Syria to implement it, and there was no popular support for such an initiative among the American people or their allies, Lando added. “A lot of my Democratic friends feel that way about Hillary and Wall Street”.
Perhaps realizing the error of her ways, on Tuesday, the former secretary of state expressed regret for her remarks. “They have names, and hopes and dreams that deserve to be respected”, Clinton said during a Facebook Q&A with Noticias Telemundo, an NBC-affiliated Spanish-language network.
“This is a job we have to take on and we have to be smart about it and we have to be vigilant about it”, Clinton said.
The Silver State consistently ranks near last in the nation as far as education spending, which is something Clinton said can be linked to things such as extraordinary population growth. “And I want people to understand – that is a law enforcement issue”.
“These terrorists are killers, they are thugs, they are criminals, they need to be treated like that, not elevated as thought they are representing a religion because even if though they claim to, they are not”, she said, speaking at E.L. Pine Middle School in Reno.
In both Denver and Boulder, Clinton drew big cheers and applause when she discussed combating climate change, defending a woman’s right to choose and fighting for marriage equality.
When she addressed the National Multifamily Housing Council in April 2013, she focused on foreign affairs, including the Arab Spring and North Korea, and deflected questions about whether she would run for president, according to a post on the organization’s website that has since been taken down. The Associated Press also cited Center for Responsive Politics data that affirmed Hillary Clinton received $35 million in campaign donations from insurance, banking and real estate entities for her political campaigns since 2000, when she first ran for the U.S. Senate.
“I would like us to look at what the federal government can do to work with poor districts”, said Clinton.
“I’m not prepared to do that”, she said. “It’s this progressive nonsense”.