Clinton Campaign Senior Adviser: Hillary Clinton Is The Most Known Un-Known Person, Dodges On TPP

Category: AR PAC

Watch Michelle Nunn equivocate in order to not answer a very straightforward question.

NBC’S KASIE HUNT: “Would you have voted for the Affordable Care Act?”

MICHELLE NUNN: “At the time the Affordable Health Care Act was passed, I was working for Points of Light. I wished that we had more people who had tried to architect a bipartisan legislation.”

HUNT: “So yes or no?”

NUNN: “So I think it’s impossible to look back retrospectively and say what would you have done if you were there?” 

MSNBC’s Morning Joe panel was none too pleased with Nunn’s efforts to be political and dodge the question.

MSNBC’s MIKA BRZEZINSKI: “I love the way Nunn schools you to say, you really can’t look back at what you would have done – you can’t look back. Actually you can but okay.”

MSNBC’s CHUCK TODD: “But I have to say I thought – boy, nothing screamed practiced politician like that answer Michelle Nunn gave on health care. It just doesn’t come across as credible. You know what’s at least more credible is saying well I supported it but I don’t like this, this, and this. At least there’s a little credibility when you give that answer. When you somehow say, well I was busy doing another job -“

BRZEZINSKI: “You can’t look back. Come on now.” 

TODD: “I think that’s a terrible answer. I think she’s going to have to get a better answer.” 

It is no secret that Michelle Nunn thinks she’s above debating her primary opponents. Earlier this week, Nunn revealed why she dislikes debating: she doesn’t think voters care about the issues. [Read more…]

Earlier this week, Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH) went out of her way during a Committee on Foreign Relations hearing to point out that Boko Haram, the militant Islamist group in Nigeria that kidnapped more than 200 girls, has nothing to do with Islam. [Read more…]

Today, Natalie Tennant (D-WV) went on MSNBC’s “Up With Steve Kornacki” to talk about her Senate race and where she stands on liberal issues.

When Kornacki asked Tennant if she would have voted for ObamaCare, Tennant dodged the question claiming she wasn’t in the Senate at the time. [Read more…]

Why do Democrats keep attacking their opponents’ military record? [Read more…]

Speaking at the JFK Library in Boston earlier today, Sen. Elizabeth Warren was asked about Democrats that supported a Bush-era bankruptcy bill that won bipartisan support. Warren began her impassioned 5-minute answer by saying, “God, it was awful,” before hammering Democrats, like Clinton and Biden, for surrendering to an “army of lobbyists” and inspiring her fight for consumer advocacy.

In her previous book, The Two Income Trap, Warren singled out Clinton for criticism among Democrats that supported the bankruptcy bill, saying she “could not afford such a principled position,” and noted the contributions she received from banking and industry executives:

In the spring of 2001, the bankruptcy bill was reintroduced in the Senate, essentially unchanged from the version President Clinton had vetoed the previous year. This time freshman Senator Hillary Clinton voted in favor of the bill. Had the bill been transformed to get rid of all those awful provisions that had so concerned First Lady Hillary Clinton? The bill was essentially the same, but Hillary Rodham Clinton was not. As First Lady, Mrs. Clinton had been persuaded that the bill was bad for families, and she was willing to fight for her beliefs. Her husband was a lame duck at the time he vetoed the bill; he could afford to forgo future campaign contributions. As New York’s newest senator, however, it seems that Hillary Clinton could not afford such a principled position. Campaigns cost money, and that money wasn’t coming from families in financial trouble. Senator Clinton received $140,000 in campaign contributions from banking industry executives in a single year, making her one of the top two recipients in the Senate. Big banks were now part of Senator Clinton’s constituency. She wanted their support, and they wanted hers—including a vote in favor of “that awful bill.”

During the 2008 Democratic primaries, Clinton under fire from President Obama, said she regretted her previous support for the bankruptcy bill:

Sen. Hillary Clinton is on the defensive for another vote aligned with President Bush early in her legislative career: this one for a measure to make it more difficult to erase personal debts through bankruptcy. As the focus of debate for presidential candidates shifts from Iraq to the economy, Sen. Barack Obama has stepped up criticism of Sen. Clinton’s 2001 bankruptcy vote, just as he has hammered her for her 2002 vote authorizing the Iraq War. The Illinois Democrat is citing Mrs. Clinton’s bankruptcy vote as an example of why he is better-suited to protect consumers in an increasingly uncertain economic time. And just as Mrs. Clinton has tried to distance herself from her Iraq vote, she has said she regrets her bankruptcy vote and wishes she could have it back.

Just when the DCCC’s week couldn’t get any worse, snubbed Democrat candidate for FL-13, the Rev. Manuel Sykes, is speaking out. [Read more…]

you-cant-handle-the-truth

Senate Majority PAC has a problem. They can’t seem to produce an accurate campaign ad.

This week, two fact checkers have discredited Senate Majority PAC’s most recent attack ad against Thom Tillis as “wrong” and rated it with three Pinocchios. [Read more…]

Yesterday Mike Obermueller, who is running for the House in Minnesota’s 2nd District, released a new ad called “Dance Party,” that criticizes his opponent John Kline for opposing ObamaCare.  The ad features business professionals dancing (like fools, frankly). [Read more…]

The Weekly Standard reports that documents recovered from the raid on Osama Bin Laden in 2011 showed Al Qaeda leadership had been in direct contact with Boko Haram, the Nigerian group that the State Department under Clinton refused to label a Foreign Terrorist Organization in 2011 and 2012, [Read more…]