Spox: ‘Hell No,’ Clinton Won’t Apologize to Trump for ISIS Remark
Saturday’s Democratic debate looked way too calmed for a White House nominee dispute, as Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton made a decision to move past their recent problems, caused by a breach of the former Secretary of State campaign’s valuable voter data. But she also called for reinstating the assault weapons ban and better background checks for potential gun purchasers.
“No, because I think that my words represent toughness and strength”.
Speaking with TIME in November, campaign manager Jeff Weaver called Clinton’s no-tax pledge and proposed tax credits a “Republican approach”.
Clinton and Sanders were joined on stage by former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley, who has struggled to be a factor in the race.
The expected fight about the latest data breach was… pretty civil.
Sanders’s campaign had complained about the timing of the debates heading into the Saturday match, which drew the lowest of any presidential debate this year at 6.71 million viewers, based on initial estimates.
“She lies about emails, she lies about Whitewater, she lies about everything”, Trump said.
Katz, an authoritative source on ISIS’s social media activities, said jihadists “follow everything Donald Trump says”, because it supports their claims that America hates Muslims.
SANDERS, apologizing for his campaign improperly gaining access to Clinton campaign data, raised the possibility that Clinton’s campaign may have done the same thing.
The United Nations has estimated a death toll of 220,000 since 2011; other estimates are higher, and Clinton’s figure is roughly in line with them. He claimed that U.S.’ priority should be defeating the Islamic State, calling Assad a “secondary issue”.
So the two campaigns were at a standstill: Trump wanted Clinton to say she’s sorry, her team refused, and no one was paying attention to the campaign squabbling anymore.
“Yeah, regime change is easy, getting rid of dictators is easy”, Sanders said.
“I’ve got to be honest with you”. But after supporting Clinton in 2008 and looking at their 2016 options, the pair was drawn to Clinton, in part, because they think she can win.
All three candidates stressed working more closely with Muslim-American communities to tackle radicalism at home – a sharp difference from the rhetoric of some Republican candidates. Saturday’s debate was the first for Democrats since the shooting in San Bernardino, Calif., where 14 people were killed by a married couple, confirms Chicago Tribune.
For months Bernie Sanders has tried and failed – and sometimes not even tried – to distinguish himself from Hillary Clinton on foreign policy. “I will certainly turn to him as prior presidents have for special missions, for advice, and in particular how we’re going to get the economy working again for everybody, which he knows a little bit about”, said Clinton.
Sanders says his plan for a government-run health care system along the lines of Canada’s and Western Europe’s would save money for families and taxpayers. Asked about IS recruitment videos, he told ABC: “She just made it up”.