Bernie Sanders touts his foreign policy judgment in new TV ad
But of Sanders, she added: “He is just so passionate and I think the way he talks really just speaks to my age group. They’re a snapshot in time and they’re based whoever you happen to reach in your polling sample”, the New Hampshire senator said to WKBK Radio on Wednesday.
Bernie Sanders put his latest TV ad online Thursday, one set to air Friday in both Iowa and New Hampshire. “I’m a sucker for a well-scored spot, and when you¹ve got permission to use a stirring track like ‘America, ‘ you’re off on the right foot”, the admaker said. Make them rethink that proposition.
Sanders campaign shot back, citing Brock’s history as a conservative activist focused on attacking the Clintons before he became their ally, and saying Clinton should be “ashamed” of her association with him.
Clinton has been hammering Sanders on a few specific issues in an effort to draw distinctions and peel away some of his support.
Clinton, a former secretary of state, led on foreign policy, garnering more trust by 40 points.
Facing a tight race in Iowa and trailing in New Hampshire, Clinton’s campaign sees her support among minority voters as a major advantage.
Sanders, meanwhile, has opened up an eight-point lead over Democratic rival Hillary Clinton, leading her in Iowa 51% to 43% among likely Democratic presidential caucus-goers. “It is worse that she would hire a mudslinger like David Brock”, Briggs said. “I am voting for her because of her beliefs, her strength and the fact that she completely embodies the concept of women empowerment”. “The real issue is who can win the election, who is prepared to do the job and who can make real change”, said the Former President.
It seems to me that Sanders is not very friendly to business. As the song moves to its refrain of “They’ve all come to look for America”, the camera pans over the crowds at Sanders’s rallies.
“The Clinton people are now facing the prospect where they could lose the first two states”, a Democratic Party strategist unaffiliated with the presidential campaigns told Business Insider last week.