O’Malley supporters in Iowa likely to pick Sanders over Clinton
Donna Hoffman, associate professor of political science at the University of Northern Iowa, said she thinks Trump’s unconvention election strategy appears to be working. “Sanders has called for more debates”, the lawmaker’s campaign manager, Jeff Weaver, said in a statement.
Sanders’ rival Hillary Clinton released a two-page letter from her personal physician in July which said she was in “excellent physical condition”.
The poll also found that Sanders took away from Clinton’s support among Iowa voters who usually participate in the Democratic caucus.
Clinton, in contrast, largely dominates those older than 45, a group that encompasses most voters.
The Iowa caucus is scheduled for February 1 and is the first formal stage of electing the Democratic presidential candidate.
“I think what the president is trying to do is the right thing”, Sanders continued.
“In other words, if Sanders prevails narrowly in Iowa or New Hampshire, his support among liberal whites and in college towns… would be entirely consistent with a scenario in which he also gets clobbered by Clinton nationally”.
“I think that what Hillary presents is a recognition that translating values into governance and delivering the goods is ultimately the job of politics, making a real-life difference to people in their day-to-day lives”, Obama told Politico. While Sanders has surged in recent opinion polls, Clinton still has the edge nationally.
“I regret we didn’t get health care back in 1993 or ’94, because we’d really be much further down the road”, she says.
“The work you do may not be as well understood and appreciated as it should be”, Clinton said in campaign footage included in the video. Sanders’ interest in adding debates during the spring shows his campaign’s eye toward an extended fight for the nomination leading up to the party’s July convention.
Emerging from the White House after an hour, Sanders said the meeting was “constructive” and that Obama was trying to be as “even-handed” as possible in the race.
“Quite frankly, the most important foreign affairs move that happened in my lifetime, the vote to go into Iraq, she failed me”, Sarandon responded, referring to Clinton’s affirmative vote for the Iraq War.