Hillary, Bernie Sanders bring White House race to Brooklyn

Democratic Presidential candidates Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., (right), and Hillary Clinton speak during the CNN Democratic Presidential Primary Debate at the Brooklyn Navy Yard on Thursday
Democratic Presidential candidates Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., (right), and Hillary Clinton speak during the CNN Democratic Presidential Primary Debate at the Brooklyn Navy Yard on Thursday
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AFP, New York :
Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders take their increasingly acrimonious battle for the Democratic White House nomination to a debate stage in Brooklyn on Thursday ahead of the key New York primary.
The former secretary of state holds a double-digit lead over the Vermont senator in the New York polls and needs a big win in next Tuesday’s primary after losing seven of the last eight contests to her leftist rival.
The Brooklyn-born Sanders, who calls himself a democratic socialist, is similarly hoping for a shock win in Clinton’s adopted home state to keep alive his dream of wresting the nomination from the Democratic frontrunner.
It makes for a dramatic showdown at the debate kicking off at 9:00 pm (0100 GMT Friday) in Brooklyn, the borough where Sanders was born and raised, and which Clinton has made her national campaign headquarters.
Addressing what his team said was a crowd of 27,000 in Manhattan on Wednesday, Sanders attacked Clinton for her ties to Wall Street, her support for trade deals that have cost US jobs and for the 2003 Iraq invasion.
“This is going to be a tough primary for us but when I look at the thousands of people who are here… I think that if we have a large voter turnout on Tuesday we’re going to win this state,” he told the giant rally in Washington Square.
Clinton is likely to drill Sanders on specifics about how he could enact his promise of political revolution.
“I have noticed that under the bright spotlight and scrutiny here in New York, Senator Sanders has had trouble answering questions,” she has said.
Sick of lies
The two campaigns have traded increasingly heated blows in recent days.
On Thursday Sanders disavowed a remark from a healthcare activist who railed against “corporate Democratic whores” at his rally the night before, targeting politicians who — like Clinton — back more incremental healthcare reforms.
Sanders tweeted that the phrase was “inappropriate and insensitive” after Clinton’s communications director Jennifer Palmieri demanded he do so, calling it “very distressing language.”
The activist, Paul Song, also apologized for being “insensitive” in referring to “some in Congress who are beholden to corporations and not us.”
Sanders, whose call for a revolution has ignited a passionate youth following, has questioned Clinton’s judgment and called her remarks about young voters “a little bit condescending.”
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