Sunday, 13 March 2016

Say, Who Was That Mysterious Man Behind Hillary Clinton?

quote [ she has “a little chuckle to myself” when she thinks about the current debates over health care. “I don’t know,” Mrs. Clinton said. “Where was he when I was trying to get health care in ’93 and ’94?”

The answer: “Literally, standing right behind her,” a Sanders spokesman, Mike Casca, said on Twitter, posting a photo from a 1994 news conference that shows Mr. Sanders next to Mrs. Clinton when the then first lady spoke about the White House’s proposed health care overhaul. ]

I voted for Hillary in the primary against Obama, but I am truly in support of Sanders because I believe he is what he stands for, and I can't say that as surely about Clinton. I also believe he has a true chance of ushering in meaningful change for the better of most if not all of us.

ST. LOUIS — An energized Hillary Clinton took aim at Donald J. Trump and Bernie Sanders on Saturday. But at least one shot backfired.

Mrs. Clinton accused Mr. Sanders of distorting her record and said the Vermont senator, who has made a single-payer health care system a signature part of his campaign, had not always been such an advocate on the issue.

She said she has “a little chuckle to myself” when she thinks about the current debates over health care. “I don’t know,” Mrs. Clinton said. “Where was he when I was trying to get health care in ’93 and ’94?”

The answer: “Literally, standing right behind her,” a Sanders spokesman, Mike Casca, said on Twitter, posting a photo from a 1994 news conference that shows Mr. Sanders next to Mrs. Clinton when the then first lady spoke about the White House’s proposed health care overhaul.

A spokeswoman for Mrs. Clinton, Jennifer Palmieri, had a comeback.

“Exactly, he was standing behind her,” Ms. Palmieri said. “She was out in front.”
[SFW] [politics] [+7 Funny]
[by jsabin69]
<-- Entry / Comment History

sanepride said @ 4:51am GMT on 13th March
FL and OH are winner-take-all only for the Republicans. For the Dems all states' delegates are awarded proportionately, which is precisely why Bernie's chances are slim-to-none. Even if he were to win both (right now polls show Hillary way ahead in both) he'd basically have to run the board for all remaining primaries in order to catch up to Hillary's delegate count.

sanepride said @ 5:02am GMT on 13th March
FL and OH are winner-take-all only for the Republicans. For the Dems all states' delegates are awarded proportionately, which is precisely why Bernie's chances are slim-to-none. Even if he were to win both (right now polls show Hillary way ahead in both) he'd basically have to run the board for all remaining primaries in order to catch up to Hillary's delegate count.


<-- Entry / Current Comment
sanepride said @ 4:51am GMT on 13th March
FL and OH are winner-take-all only for the Republicans. For the Dems all states' delegates are awarded proportionately, which is precisely why Bernie's chances are slim-to-none. Even if he were to win both (right now polls show Hillary way ahead in both) he'd basically have to run the board for all remaining primaries in order to catch up to Hillary's delegate count.



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