Sunday, April 17, 2016

Distortion


Juan Gonzalez, of the New York Daily News, who was present during the interview says that Hillary Clinton distorted what Bernie Sanders said in the famed New York Daily News interview, and that several members of the board who did the interview have said the same:
http://www.democracynow.org/2016/4/15/juan_gonzalez_clinton_has_really_distorted
~ Article from Democracy Now; photo from Huffington Post

9 comments:

  1. We leave on Sunday for Boston. Well, literally Needham and Natick, MA, to see our son run in the Boston Marathon on Monday morning! He ran it last year in about three hours (that's wicked fast!). We expect to see him for maybe six seconds as he runs past, giving a swift high five to his two daughters as they also hand him small cups of water. It will be fun to watch with our two Maine Granddaughters, Daughter-in-law (their Mom, running son's wife), Daughter and our Grandson, as well as my Brother, Sister-in-Law and adult Niece! Yayyy!!

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  2. Gravis Poll - New York Democratic Primary
    Hillary Clinton: 53%
    Bernie Sanders: 47%

    Alan

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    Replies
    1. Excluding the undecideds. If enough of them break for Bernie, and the trunour is good, the election is within reach.

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  3. A new Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll finds…[a]mong voters in both parties, 56% hold a negative view of Hillary Clinton and 32% hold a positive view. That 24-point gap is almost twice as wide as in a Journal/NBC poll last month, when 51% viewed her negatively and 38% positively, a 13-point gap.
    Donald Trump continues to be the candidate… viewed most negatively, with 65% of registered voters viewing him unfavorably and 24% favorably, a 41-point difference. Unlike with Mrs. Clinton, those numbers haven’t changed much over the past month.
    =============================
    Sen. Bernie Sanders won a decisive victory in Colorado, taking a majority of the national delegates with a stronger-than-expected showing at a divided state Democratic convention, the Denver Post reports.
    “The Vermont senator captured 41 delegates from the state’s 78-member delegation, inching him closer to front-runner Hillary Clinton in what the campaign suggested is a larger shift in the presidential race. The margin gives Sanders a clear hold on Colorado — enough to overcome Clinton’s advantage among the state’s dozen superdelegates.”

    —Alan

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