Hillary Rodham Clinton – The New York Times

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Voters see her as a strong leader, but they think her party is weak on terrorism. Which will matter more to the presidential election?

By THOMAS B. EDSALL

Hours after a new poll gave Donald J. Trump a strong lead in the New Hampshire primary, Mrs. Clinton arrived there to blast his proposed prohibition on Muslims entering the country and accuse other Republican presidential candidates of maligning Muslims in their own ways.

By PATRICK HEALY

The Obama administrations response that it was reviewing reports of the launch of a medium-range ballistic missile, drew Democratic and Republican criticism.

By DAVID E. SANGER

The decision to support Senator Sanders has divided the labor-aligned partys leaders, some of whom have endorsed Hillary Clinton for the Democratic nomination.

By ALEXANDER BURNS and MAGGIE HABERMAN

Hillary Clinton on Sunday was the latest political figure to urge tech companies to get tougher about what terrorists are posting on their services. While any solution would be tricky to accomplish, a model does exist.

By JIM KERSTETTER

On Monday night, Hillary Clintons longtime aide, Huma Abedin, sent a mass email to supporters, saying that Mr. Trumps Islamophobia did not reflect the nations values and could even threaten our national security.

By AMY CHOZICK

Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts stopped short of endorsing Hillary Clintons presidential bid, but showed agreement with her on being against any legislation that would weaken regulation in the financial sector.

By AMY CHOZICK

Nevada Democrats and the Senate minority leader, Harry Reid, will host all three Democratic candidates at a party dinner on Jan. 6. The state, which has an emerging Hispanic electorate, has grown in importance for the party.

By MAGGIE HABERMAN

By turns withering and mocking, Republican presidential candidates blasted President Obamas speech on terrorism on Sunday night, saying that he was misguided and weak.

By PATRICK HEALY

Noting the Islamic States use of social media to recruit followers, Mrs. Clinton, at the Saban Forum, said We need to put the great disrupters at work at disrupting ISIS.

By DAVID E. SANGER

Mr. Trump said on Sunday that he supported some racial and religious profiling in combating terrorism, while Mr. Christie said that stance reflected a lack of experience and understanding.

By PATRICK HEALY

Crises face the mayoralty of Rahm Emanuel, a former senior aide to President Bill Clinton, as Hillary Clinton focuses her campaign on criminal justice overhauls, the latest twist in their longtime relationship.

By AMY CHOZICK

As Republican candidates demanded on Friday that the United States face up to a new world war, Democrats seemed to offer a more muddled response.

By MICHAEL BARBARO and TRIP GABRIEL

The saga of Anthony D. Weiner has been out of the headlines for a while, but it will be on the silver screen in January, just in time for the Iowa caucuses.

By ALAN RAPPEPORT

Hillary Clinton called for gun control measures and reiterated President Obamas statement that terrorism had not been ruled out as the motive behind the mass shooting in San Bernardino, Calif.

By AMY CHOZICK

Mr. Trump used personal ties, and some stereotyping, to appeal to Jewish Republican donors, and claimed he could revive peace talks between Israelis and Palestinians in six months, tops.

By JASON HOROWITZ

Mrs. Clintons top aides are scrutinizing what have been core functions of the party committee, such as research and communications for the general election.

By MAGGIE HABERMAN

Spending has increased on political ads on the radio, which may be more effective at targeting a candidates intended audience, strategists said.

By NICK CORASANITI

Mrs. Clinton will begin a daylong blitz on Thursday across a state where support for Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont remains strong despite his recent dip against her nationally.

By AMY CHOZICK

As the Islamic State becomes a top concern among those casting ballots, many are evaluating candidates on how they might react to an act of terror.

By PATRICK HEALY

Noting the Islamic States use of social media to recruit followers, Mrs. Clinton, at the Saban Forum, said We need to put the great disrupters at work at disrupting ISIS.

By DAVID E. SANGER

Mrs. Clinton, speaking at an event commemorating Rosa Parks, said there was something profoundly wrong with how black men are treated by the system.

By AMY CHOZICK

A trove of messages made public by the State Department also touches on technology difficulties and a concussion.

By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT

A visit to the Republican National Committees opposition research team, who have their eyes on Hillary Rodham Clinton all the time.

By ELIZABETH WILLIAMSON

At campaign events, Mrs. Clinton focuses her criticism on the 14 Republicans running for president, and she does not mention her main Democratic rival, Mr. Sanders.

By AMY CHOZICK

At a time when liberals are ascendant in the party, some Democrats believe Hillary Rodham Clintons time representing Wall Street as a senator could become a vulnerability.

By PATRICK HEALY

She just became the first of the presidential candidates to put forward a comprehensive, mature plan to fight ISIS and Assad.

By DAVID BROOKS

Her speech gave voters, and the other candidates, her vision for dealing with terrorism.

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

Mrs. Clinton called for speeding up the American-led operations against the Islamic State including a no-fly zone and more airstrikes.

By AMY CHOZICK and DAVID E. SANGER

The presidential races new emphasis on terrorism has laid bare Mrs. Clintons long-held differences with President Obama on foreign policy.

By AMY CHOZICK

After a good start on national security and terrorism, Hillary Clinton flubbed legitimate questions about her ties to Wall Street on Saturday.

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

The fight against global terrorism became a focus of the debate after attacks in Paris that laid bare the kinds of threats the next American president will face.

By AMY CHOZICK and JONATHAN MARTIN

Hillary Clinton holds a 19-point lead over Bernie Sanders. She should stop playing it safe and spell out what her proposals mean, in bold detail.

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

Presidential candidates from both parties are seizing on growing national ambivalence about capital punishment after an era in which Democrats strove to seem tough on crime.

By THOMAS KAPLAN

Democrats inside and outside Mr. Sanderss campaign said he may be limited in stopping a resurgent Mrs. Clinton, partly because of his reluctance to strike first.

By PATRICK HEALY and MAGGIE HABERMAN

In a new poll, 62 percent said Mrs. Clinton could bring about real change in Washington, compared with 51 percent for Mr. Sanders.

By PATRICK HEALY and MEGAN THEE-BRENAN

Mr. Sanders and his rivals for the Democratic presidential nomination, Hillary Rodham Clinton and Martin OMalley, sought to differentiate themselves in back-to-back interviews.

By AMY CHOZICK

Officials said they were defending the principle that presidents must be free to receive advice from advisers without fear that the conversations will be made public while theyre in office.

By MICHAEL D. SHEAR and MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT

After months of withholding his endorsement, the mayor threw his support behind Mrs. Clinton in an interview on MSNBCs Morning Joe.

By MICHAEL M. GRYNBAUM

Though running for senator from New York required Hillary Rodham Clinton to reluctantly let down her guard, she gradually became an adept campaigner.

By MAGGIE HABERMAN

Voters see her as a strong leader, but they think her party is weak on terrorism. Which will matter more to the presidential election?

By THOMAS B. EDSALL

Hours after a new poll gave Donald J. Trump a strong lead in the New Hampshire primary, Mrs. Clinton arrived there to blast his proposed prohibition on Muslims entering the country and accuse other Republican presidential candidates of maligning Muslims in their own ways.

By PATRICK HEALY

The Obama administrations response that it was reviewing reports of the launch of a medium-range ballistic missile, drew Democratic and Republican criticism.

By DAVID E. SANGER

The decision to support Senator Sanders has divided the labor-aligned partys leaders, some of whom have endorsed Hillary Clinton for the Democratic nomination.

By ALEXANDER BURNS and MAGGIE HABERMAN

Hillary Clinton on Sunday was the latest political figure to urge tech companies to get tougher about what terrorists are posting on their services. While any solution would be tricky to accomplish, a model does exist.

By JIM KERSTETTER

On Monday night, Hillary Clintons longtime aide, Huma Abedin, sent a mass email to supporters, saying that Mr. Trumps Islamophobia did not reflect the nations values and could even threaten our national security.

By AMY CHOZICK

Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts stopped short of endorsing Hillary Clintons presidential bid, but showed agreement with her on being against any legislation that would weaken regulation in the financial sector.

By AMY CHOZICK

Nevada Democrats and the Senate minority leader, Harry Reid, will host all three Democratic candidates at a party dinner on Jan. 6. The state, which has an emerging Hispanic electorate, has grown in importance for the party.

By MAGGIE HABERMAN

By turns withering and mocking, Republican presidential candidates blasted President Obamas speech on terrorism on Sunday night, saying that he was misguided and weak.

By PATRICK HEALY

Noting the Islamic States use of social media to recruit followers, Mrs. Clinton, at the Saban Forum, said We need to put the great disrupters at work at disrupting ISIS.

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Hillary Rodham Clinton - The New York Times

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