The Third Democratic Debate In 100 Words (And 4 Video Clips)
“Mr. Trump has a great capacity to use bluster and bigotry to inflame people”, said Clinton, the former secretary of state.
“There’s no such video”.
At the Democratic debate on Saturday night, Hillary Clinton went beyond suggesting that Donald Trump’s rhetoric might lead to an increase in terrorist recruitment.
She blasted his proposal to ban Muslims from entering the United States, calling him “ISIL’s best recruiter”.
“We’ve seen a number of ISIS sympathizers online cite Mr. Trump’s recent comments but to my knowledge, we haven’t seen it in the official ISIS propaganda channels”, said Seamus Hughes, deputy director of the Program on Extremism at George Washington University’s Center for Cyber & Homeland Security.
“He is becoming ISIS’s best recruiter”, she said.
For Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta, that’s enough to indicate that Trump is helping, not hurting, the jihadist group.
In the previous debates, Sanders hammered Clinton for her close to ties to campaign donors from Wall Street banks and wealthy hedge fund investors.
“I don’t think the American people are all that interested in this”, she said.
Vox.com tweeted at J.M. Berger, author of the book ISIS: The State of Terror, and Berger tweeted back, “I would be surprised if they had and we didn’t hear about it in a big way”. “I mean, she made it up; it was a sound bite”.
Palmieri said on ABC’s “This Week”, “She didn’t have a particular video in mind, but he is being used in social media”.
“Based on this information, we are restoring the Sanders campaign’s access to the voter file, but will continue to investigate to ensure that the data that was inappropriately accessed has been deleted and is no longer in possession of the Sanders campaign”, DNC Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz, a Florida congresswoman, said in a statement. “It is not Assad who is attacking the United States – it is ISIS”.
Democratic White House hopeful Hillary Clinton on Saturday says that as president she will probably still pick out the dinnerware and flowers for state occasions and send her husband, former president Bill Clinton, on special missions. Asked if he wished to apologize, Sanders did, to Clinton and to his own supporters. “It’s time now to turn to the issues that matter to Americans, because it’s certainly in stark contrast to the extremism that we’re seeing on the Republican side”.
O’Malley also agreed with Sanders saying that, with regards to the Syrian crisis, Clinton was taking a similar stance with Libya which he described as a trap.
The Sanders campaign even touted one of the initial results are in from that burst of attention: $1 million raised in 24 hours, nearly double the $600,000 daily haul they say they raised, according to court filings.
Will it actually help O’Malley at the polls? I think a lot of the Libyans who had been forced out of their country by Gadhafi who came back to try to be part of a new government, believed they knew what to do and it turned out they were no match for some of the militaristic forces inside that country.
“Regime change is easy, getting rid of dictators is easy”, he said.
Sanders said Clinton is too enamored of replacing dictatorial regimes and will make the Middle East even more volatile.
“Whoa, whoa, whoa, Martin”, Sanders said.
That’s because up until the moment the debate started, the Sanders campaign and the Clinton campaign were still trading barbs after Sanders aides peeked at proprietary Clinton campaign data they weren’t supposed to. “We need to speak to what unites us as a people; freedom of worship, freedom of religion, freedom of expression”.
Among Republican and Democratic contenders alike, King Abdullah II is considered an important figure in the struggle for stability in the Middle East. But darned if they can nail down his name.