Bernie Sanders’s campaign manager says Hillary Clinton’s campaign is in ‘disarray’
Democratic Party officials in the U.S. state of Iowa have found new errors in the original count in Monday’s Iowa caucus where Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton narrowly beat Bernie Sanders.
The former Secretary of State pushed back on the criticism that she shouts, whereas a hoarse-voiced Sanders doesn’t face the same scrutiny.
At a rally in a school Mr Clinton said his wife’s supporters had suffered “unbelievable personal attacks” on the internet from those of Mr Sanders.
The senator’s approach seems better-aligned than Clinton’s with New Hampshire’s “live free or die” culture.
Staff problems plagued Clinton’s 2008 White House run, and there was talk of a shakeup at about this point in her earlier primary fight.
Clinton met with mothers impacted by the contaminated water before the event and pledged to the mayor and pastors form the church that she will “not let the light dim” on Flint. In occasionally tense exchanges with voters, he’s defended voting to shield gun manufacturers from lawsuits and called for “some give on both sides” of an enormously divisive cultural issue. His progressive message is resonating with Democrats – especially young voters – and for the first time last month he raised more money than Team Hillary. That victory helped her become the new “Comeback Kid” – the same moniker her husband claimed after his strong finish in the state in 1992 jump-started his road to the Democratic nomination.
The Ohio Republican replied, “Well, I’ll tell you, the grounds on which I might favor one of them”.
Meanwhile, Mr Clinton extended his assault on Mr Sanders, calling him hypocritical fro making attacks on Wall Street and “the billionaire class”.
Sanders also reportedly told CNN on Sunday, “Anybody who’s supporting me and doing sexist things – we don’t want them…I don’t want them”. Clinton and her allies have taken $21.4 million from Wall Street for her presidential campaign so far, according to an analysis by Washington Post.
“The New Hampshire I knew would not have voted for me if I had done that”, he added.
He also took aim at Sanders supporters who have supposedly attacked Hillary Clinton’s backers online.
And Clinton advised the audience to reject Sanders’s broad attacks on Clinton and his simple outsider-versus-establishment argument. Sanders, Diane Meagher of Keene said, represents the type of change from politics as usual that she’s looking for – something she just doesn’t see in Clinton.
“We can’t get in a place where we’re so mad, we demonize everyone against us”, the former president later said, clearly frustrated.