Surprise: Hillary Campaign Balks At Releasing Wall Street Speech Transcripts
“We also need to strip away the immunity that President Sanders — I’m sorry, excuse me. Sen”.
Over on the Democratic side, Sanders holds 58% among likely Democratic primary voters, well ahead of Clinton’s 35%.
Clinton has pledged to fight for every vote in New Hampshire, but at least some of her operation is moving on.
She’d…look into it: Again, if she’s the paragon of transparency that she claims to be (snicker), and if her Wall Street speeches were as prophetic and civic-minded as she says, her campaign should be turning them into ads.
Clinton said Sunday that she’d release the transcripts but that others, including 2016 White House rivals, must do the same and suggested that she’s being unfairly targeted, as she has in the past.
Sanders’ boost brought him to a quarter of a percentage point within Clinton’s number.
“I know something about lead poisoning because of the work I’ve done in the past (with Children’s Defense Fund) and as a senator from NY, we had a lot of old housing with lead paint in it. A lot of kids suffered from lead poisoning”, Clinton said.
Sanders, campaigning earlier in Rindge, expressed confidence in Tuesday’s contest while noting that Clinton prevailed in the 2008 New Hampshire primary. In an interview with NBC’s “Meet the Press”, Sanders later said it would “be a positive thing for the American people to know what was said behind closed doors to Wall Street, but ultimately that is her decision”.
Instead, surprise:In response to a question at Thursday night’s debate, Hillary Clinton said she would “look into” the possibility of releasing transcripts of her paid remarks to banking, corporate and financial services companies like Goldman Sachs.
“We think it’s gonna be a close election, we’re working really hard”, Sanders told Tapper.
The same survey showed Clinton with 32 percent support overall among Democrats and Sanders with 61 percent.
Much of the polling was conducted before the final GOP debate before the New Hampshire primary, from February 4-6, among 508 likely Republican primary voters.
“Well, in this sense it is”. Secretary Clinton won this state in 2008.
Clinton aides worry that a big Sanders victory in New Hampshire would help him make headway among women and minority voters, important parts of the coalition that twice elected Barack Obama as president.
“This is one of these innuendo insinuation charges that the Sanders campaign is engaging in”, Clinton said on ABC’s “This Week”.