Clinton: GOP ‘put the NRA ahead of’ families
In contrast to Sanders, Clinton spent much of the summer, in the wake of mass shootings in Charleston, South Carolina, Roanoke, Virginia, and elsewhere, advocating new measures to quell gun violence and actively speaking of curbing the power of the NRA, which repeatedly has worked to defeat new gun-control initiatives in Congress.
He and his classmates were also going to work the rally into a paper for a speech class they’re taking.
“I just want a better perspective of what she is running for”, said Knson Nuvall.
In the back of the gym, another student, Nichole Zapata, was rethinking her decision to bring her grandmother to see Clinton speak. The same day in Little Rock, she appeared more than 30 minutes after the crowd in a sweltering gym expected her. However, she wouldn’t say whether that meant teh shooter had been arrested or was killed. The news outlet also reports that Latino celebs, elected officials and community leaders will begin announcing their public support of the former Secretary of State. “But more than talk, it is time to act”. Lines move more slowly as the Secret Service screens attendees.
Nevada campaign director Emmy Ruiz said the efforts aim to get more people to choose Clinton in the caucus.
Clinton won’t be the only one doing the chatting, either.
Democratic stalwarts like Rabinowitz seemed to mind less than undecided attendees, a few of them assuming Clinton would be late.
She’s not so far off. According to an NBC/Wall Street Journal poll released this week, 53 percent of Latinos have a positive view of Clinton, with just 21 percent holding a negative perception of the politician.
Hurricane Joaquin destroyed houses, uprooted trees and unleashed heavy flooding as it hurled torrents of rain across the eastern and central Bahamas on Friday, and the U.S. Coast Guard said it was searching for a cargo ship with 33 people aboard that went missing during the Category 4 storm. “This isn’t somebody who showed up, made a decision to run for president and then a lightbulb came on and she chose to reach out to the Hispanic community”, said Rep. Joaquin Castro, D-Texas, who will campaign for Clinton in Nevada following the October 13 debate in Las Vegas. “I’ve been standing here a long, long time”.