Hillary Clinton & Bruce Braley Attack Iowas Job Creators – Video
Hillary Clinton Bruce Braley Attack Iowas Job Creators
By: IowaGOP
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Hillary Clinton & Bruce Braley Attack Iowas Job Creators - Video
Hillary Clinton Bruce Braley Attack Iowas Job Creators
By: IowaGOP
Originally posted here:
Hillary Clinton & Bruce Braley Attack Iowas Job Creators - Video
My Top 3 BDSM Partners Are Hillary Clinton, Nancy Pelosi Dianne Feinstein
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By: Deep Space
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My Top 3 BDSM Partners Are Hillary Clinton, Nancy Pelosi & Dianne Feinstein - Video
Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton delivers remarks on behalf of Maryland Democrats Anthony Brown (background R) and Ken Ulman (top-L) during a campaign rally October 30, 2014 at the Ritchie Coliseum at the University of Maryland in College Park Maryland. PAUL J. RICHARDS/AFP/Getty Images
Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was at the University of Maryland on Thursday to stump for Anthony Brown, Maryland's Democratic gubernatorial candidate, but she ended up defending her own record on immigration reform after protesters repeatedly interrupted her speech.
"If they had just waited a little while, I was getting to the Dream Act," Clinton joked at the rally, referencing the legislation that gives certain undocumented youth a pathway to citizenship.
"As a senator, I was proud to co-sponsor the national Dream Act and to vote for it," she said. "I'm a strong supporter of comprehensive immigration reform, and I believe we have to fix our broken immigration system, [and] we have to keep families together."
Clinton noted that Maryland -- during Brown's tenure as lieutenant governor -- passed its own version of the Dream Act.
The potential presidential candidate was interrupted at least four times by protesters looking for more reforms to the immigration system, though the campus crowd seemed to rally around her, chanting, "Hillary! Hillary!"
As the protesters continued, Clinton at one point remarked, "We want people to be champions and advocates for the causes they believe in."
Pro-immigration reform demonstrators have pressured lawmakers on the issue all year. After Congress failed to pass a comprehensive immigration reform bill in 2013, President Obama promised to take more executive action on the issue over the summer. However, by September, the White House said it would wait to take action.
The White House is still considering ways to reduce the number of deportations, the Wall Street Journal reports. Some immigration reform advocates, though, are concerned the administration's actions may not be bold enough.
The delayed action has raised the question of how motivated Latino voters will be to turn out on Election Day for Democrats. The Latino vote could have an impact in some states like Colorado.
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Hillary Clinton heckled by immigration protesters
Former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton came to Maryland on Thursday to praise the record of the O'Malley administration and urge young voters to turn out for Lt. Gov. Anthony G. Brown.
At a rally on the University of Maryland in College Park, Clinton said that as governor, Brown "would be on your side," fighting to promote gender equality, gun-control laws and other core Democratic values.
She urged college students to drag their roommates to the polls.
"They may be checking the box next to Anthony Brown, but they're really voting for themselves," Clinton said. "I really think you will be proud of the job Anthony Brown will do. ... He can't do anything if you can't turn out for him."
Clinton is the latest in a string of high-profile Democrats hoping to buoy Brown in his tight race against Republican Larry Hogan in Tuesday's election.
Hogan, meanwhile, campaigned along Harford Road in Baltimore County on Thursday afternoon, seeking votes in the battleground jurisdiction and popping into businesses. He stressed his message that only pocketbook issues matter in this election.
"We're going to try to roll back as many of those 40 tax increases as we can," Hogan told Tim Bonner, a towing company owner who attended a Hogan event in Parkville. Small businesses, Hogan said, have been "really getting squeezed over the last eight years."
The contest for governor is unexpectedly close for a state where Democrats outnumber Republicans 2-1. Brown leads in most polls by single digits.
During Maryland's eight-day early voting period which ended Thursday Democrats cast by far the most votes. More than 308,300 early ballots were cast, state elections officials said Thursday night. Their figures show about 62 percent were by Democrats, about 28 percent by Republicans, and the rest by independent and third-party voters.
In College Park, Clinton encouraged the mostly college-age crowd of several hundred people in Ritchie Coliseum to support Brown if they want to continue an agenda that legalized gay marriage and allows in-state tuition for some immigrants who are in the country without legal documentation.
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Hillary Clinton rallies for Brown
COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) When it comes to potential Democratic primary rivals, Hillary Rodham Clinton is displaying a light touch.
Heading into Tuesday's midterm elections, Clinton has crossed paths with two possible presidential competitors in the past week: Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley and Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren. By all accounts, the back-and-forth of a debate stage remains a long way off.
"For the past eight years, you've had a great team," Clinton said at the University of Maryland, where she vouched for Lt. Gov. Anthony Brown, who is running to succeed O'Malley. The outgoing governor has a lengthy record that puts him in good standing with liberals, and he's also known for fronting a Celtic rock band.
"I don't know if Anthony plays an instrument but your current governor does," Clinton said. "And so he's gotten the Legislature and the people to sing along for eight years, and the melody has been terrific."
Clinton offered a similar embrace in Boston last week, heaping praise on Warren as a "passionate champion" for workers and families. "I love watching Elizabeth give it to those who deserve to get it," she said.
The midterm elections have put them the three Democrats, along with Vice President Joe Biden, before crowds of Democrats who could help energize a future White House bid. They haven't declared their intentions yet but Clinton remains the dominant Democratic contender if she runs.
How fellow Democrats could influence Clinton in presidential primary contests as candidates or on the sidelines remains an open question.
O'Malley picked a policy fight with the Obama administration last summer over the influx of unaccompanied immigrant children crossing the southern border into Texas. Expediting the deportations of the children, O'Malley said at the time, would "send them back to certain death."
Clinton's Maryland speech was interrupted several times by protesters pressing her over President Barack Obama's expected executive orders on immigration after the midterm elections. Carrying signs that read "Choose Families Over Politics," waves of activists heckled Clinton during her speech, prompting her to respond that she was a "strong supporter of comprehensive immigration reform."
Warren has repeatedly denied interest in running for president although she did suggest some wiggle room recently but she remains a forceful voice on income inequality and refinancing college loans. Liberals hope Warren's popularity within the party encourages Clinton to adopt some of their concerns. But they remain wary of the former secretary of state's ties to Wall Street.
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Hillary Clinton praises possible primary rivals