Peter1469
10-03-2016, 01:09 PM
Many Sander’s supporters won’t forgive Hillary (http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2016/10/02/despite-donald-trump-many-bernie-sanders-supporters-won-t-forgive-hillary-clinton.html)
Of course not. She is a horrible person.
http://cdn.thedailybeast.com/content/dailybeast/articles/2016/10/02/despite-donald-trump-many-bernie-sanders-supporters-won-t-forgive-hillary-clinton/jcr:content/image.crop.800.500.jpg/49179159.cached.jpg
Hillary Clinton was frequently on the offensive at her first face-off with Donald Trump, but she had no response to one particular attack: “What did we learn with DNC?” he asked. “We learned that Bernie Sanders was taken advantage of by your people.”
Unlike most Trump claims, this one had the advantage of being true. And it rubbed salt in a wound that could well cost Clinton the presidency.
In late August, Neera Tanden, the president of the Center for American Progress, longtime Hillary confidant and potential future White House official, offered a candid public assessment of recent political history that cut against conventional wisdom. The 2016 Democratic primary contest, she asserted, was “much tougher” than the 2008 version.
All throughout the long, arduous slog between Clinton and Bernie Sanders, liberal pundits downplayed the significance of internal party discord, invariably insisting that it paled in comparison to the brutal Clinton-Obama battle eight years ago. They routinely assured nervous partisans that Democratic voters would quickly cast aside their internecine grievances and unite for the general election, allowing Clinton to waltz smoothly into the Oval Office.
Of course not. She is a horrible person.
http://cdn.thedailybeast.com/content/dailybeast/articles/2016/10/02/despite-donald-trump-many-bernie-sanders-supporters-won-t-forgive-hillary-clinton/jcr:content/image.crop.800.500.jpg/49179159.cached.jpg
Hillary Clinton was frequently on the offensive at her first face-off with Donald Trump, but she had no response to one particular attack: “What did we learn with DNC?” he asked. “We learned that Bernie Sanders was taken advantage of by your people.”
Unlike most Trump claims, this one had the advantage of being true. And it rubbed salt in a wound that could well cost Clinton the presidency.
In late August, Neera Tanden, the president of the Center for American Progress, longtime Hillary confidant and potential future White House official, offered a candid public assessment of recent political history that cut against conventional wisdom. The 2016 Democratic primary contest, she asserted, was “much tougher” than the 2008 version.
All throughout the long, arduous slog between Clinton and Bernie Sanders, liberal pundits downplayed the significance of internal party discord, invariably insisting that it paled in comparison to the brutal Clinton-Obama battle eight years ago. They routinely assured nervous partisans that Democratic voters would quickly cast aside their internecine grievances and unite for the general election, allowing Clinton to waltz smoothly into the Oval Office.