An expensive reminder that Sanders still hasn’t dropped out: His Secret Service detail

An expensive reminder that Sanders still hasn’t dropped out: His Secret Service detail
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The Washington PostJohn Wagner 6 hrs ago
© Matt McClain/The Washington Post Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders arrives at the Capital Hilton last week, his Secret Service detail in tow, to meet with rival and presumptive nominee…
BURLINGTON, Vt. — When Sen. Bernie Sanders, the now-vanquished Democratic presidential candidate, returns to Capitol Hill to vote Monday, he is expected to be accompanied by his constant traveling companions from the campaign trail: the U.S. Secret Service.
Although Hillary Clinton has clinched the party’s nomination, Sanders retains one of the trappings of a top-notch candidate. A team of agents still guards him at his home, where they’ve constructed a small watch station on the property. They travel with him on commercial and charter flights and use a motorcade to whisk him through cities he visits. And they recently marched alongside him during a gay-pride event here in his home town after the Orlando shootings.
Such round-the-clock protection can cost taxpayers more than $38,000 a day. And with the potential for the Secret Service to be watching over Sanders through the Democratic convention in Philadelphia five weeks from now, the taxpayers may get stuck with a big security bill long after his campaign receded from the daily cable-news cycle.
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Hillary has called canceling the agreement reckless, but at least he liked the sanctions. Clearly, once the Republicans really get into issues as opposed to their sterling and stunning resumés, the Iran agreement will be one of the hot-button issues.THE IRAN NUCLEAR DEAL.
When I'm president, we'll cancel it on my first day in office. We'll reimpose the sanctions that are on the books. I'll ask Congress to increase them on every sector of their economy. And it'll make it very clear to Iran, if they want a peaceful nuclear program, they have to pursue it the way South Korea does, the way Japan does, by importing the enriched material. And if they try to build weapons, we're going to destroy their weapons program.
Apr 22, 2010
Inside Secretary Clinton's Iran Strategy: Forget the Gates Memo Flap — We Have a Plan
By Tom Junod
I felt better about myself as an American after spending time with Hillary Clinton for the profile of her that appears in the May issue of Esquire. Seriously. It's not just the obvious — it's not just the fact that she never appears so quintessentially American, as simultaneously Daisy-Millerish and Tracy-Flickish, as when she stands smiling on a stage with a bunch of European guys with permanent five-o'clock shadows. It's not even that I wind up applauding my country for producing a woman whose genius is for a kind of can-do level-headedness that somehow manages to drive both enemies and admirers around the bend. No, it's that after traveling to Montreal, London, and Paris with the secretary of state — after listening to three of her speeches and attending at least a dozen diplomatic ceremonies and then interviewing her — I'm a little less concerned than I was about the problem of American power. And because of Hillary Clinton, we should all be a lot less concerned about the problem of a nuclear Iran (no matter the war games nor the cautious talk).
- Astrid Riecken/Getty Images
But first, let's face it: The problem with American power is that there seems to be less of it these days. We're fighting wars we can't win and incurring debts we can't pay, and the upshot of all that is that we can't tell other countries what to do. "You have to approach this [diplomacy] with humility," Secretary Clinton told me. "Even if you think we're right — and in fact I do believe we're right about the major issues — you can't just assert it." Now, on the face of it that sounds like a pretty standard, Obama-era formulation, right down to the encoded reference to the Bush administration, whose policy of diplomacy-by-assertion only wound up making us look at once decisive and ineffectual — decisively ineffectual, if you will. But the thing that makes it also a classic Hillary formulation is the parenthetical insistence that she, and we, are right. She has never been given to apology, and while this has caused her some problems politically — think the Iraq war vote — it serves her well as President Obama's secretary of state. She does not give you the sense, as Obama sometimes does, that she's conducting foreign policy in expiation of the sins of the previous administration, or for that matter of the previous 234-odd years of American history. She's not guilty about anything, least of all American power, and standing next to her is like standing next to a Minuteman missile — you can have all sorts of opinions about her, but ultimately you're glad that she's one of ours.
Absolutely! Read on >>>>Going forward into the debates and the next phase of the campaign, Junod's articles are handy pieces for us all to keep in our back pockets.
Jeb Bush said he'd put UK Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher on the $10. Were there no U.S. women available? #GOPDebate pic.twitter.com/ZAguSwINJf
— AJ+ (@ajplus) September 17, 2015
The only reaction to @JebBush suggesting Margaret Thatcher be on 10 dollar bill pic.twitter.com/T8WeQoG5fo
— Lis Smith (@Lis_Smith) September 17, 2015
— Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) September 17, 2015
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May 24, 2013 - Hillary Clinton Tops Rubio, Paul In 2016 Iowa Pres Race, Quinnipiac University Poll Finds
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If the 2016 presidential election were today, Iowa voters back former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton over Republican Senators Marco Rubio of Florida or Rand Paul of Kentucky, but Vice President Joseph Biden trails Rand and ties Rubio in the Hawkeye State, according to a Quinnipiac University poll released today.
In an early look at the 2016 White House race, Ms. Clinton would defeat Sen. Rubio of Florida 48 - 37 percent. In a race against Sen. Paul of Kentucky, she would have a very small 46 - 42 percent margin.
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"The major difference between former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Vice President Joseph Biden is that she runs much better among independent voters, although Sen. Rand Paul runs better among that key group than either Democrat," said Peter A. Brown, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute.
7. If the election for President were being held today, and the candidates were Hillary Clinton the Democrat and Marco Rubio the Republican, for whom would you vote?
Tot Rep Dem Ind Men Wom Clinton 48% 11% 89% 41% 43% 53% Rubio 37 80 3 36 44 31 SMONE ELSE(VOL) 3 1 1 5 3 2 WLDN'T VOTE(VOL) 3 2 2 5 4 3 DK/NA 9 7 5 12 7 11 WHITE.............................................. COLLEGE DEG BornAgnEv Yes No Prot Cath Men Wom Yes No Clinton 46% 48% 41% 45% 42% 52% 32% 49% Rubio 46 35 45 38 45 32 53 37 SMONE ELSE(VOL) 2 3 2 2 3 2 1 2 WLDN'T VOTE(VOL) 1 4 3 1 4 3 4 2 DK/NA 5 11 10 15 7 11 10 9 COLLEGE DEG ANNUAL HSHOLD INC AGE IN YRS.............. Yes No <50K 50-100 >100K 18-29 30-44 45-64 65+ Clinton 48% 48% 51% 49% 42% 51% 45% 48% 48% Rubio 45 35 33 37 52 32 37 39 38 SMONE ELSE(VOL) 1 3 3 3 1 4 5 2 1 WLDN'T VOTE(VOL) 1 4 4 2 2 5 5 2 3 DK/NA 5 10 9 9 3 8 8 9 9 9. If the election for President were being held today, and the candidates were Hillary Clinton the Democrat and Rand Paul the Republican, for whom would you vote?Tot Rep Dem Ind Men Wom Clinton 46% 9% 89% 38% 39% 53% Paul 42 82 4 44 49 34 SMONE ELSE(VOL) 3 2 2 4 3 3 WLDN'T VOTE(VOL) 3 3 1 4 3 2 DK/NA 7 4 4 10 6 8 WHITE.............................................. COLLEGE DEG BornAgnEv Yes No Prot Cath Men Wom Yes No Clinton 47% 45% 40% 46% 38% 53% 30% 49% Paul 43 42 50 40 51 35 58 39 SMONE ELSE(VOL) 3 3 2 2 3 3 3 3 WLDN'T VOTE(VOL) 1 3 2 1 3 2 4 2 DK/NA 5 7 5 11 6 7 5 8 COLLEGE DEG ANNUAL HSHOLD INC AGE IN YRS.............. Yes No <50K 50-100 >100K 18-29 30-44 45-64 65+ Clinton 49% 45% 48% 47% 41% 42% 44% 48% 48% Paul 42 41 40 39 53 46 41 42 38 SMONE ELSE(VOL) 3 3 3 3 1 2 5 3 1 WLDN'T VOTE(VOL) 1 3 3 1 1 3 1 2 5 DK/NA 5 8 6 9 3 7 8 6 8 Read more >>>>
March 21, 2013 - Clinton Tops Florida Favorite Sons In 2016 Race, Quinnipiac University Poll FindsSeriously? There are people who haven't heard enough about her?
Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has double-digit leads over either of Florida's favorite sons, former Gov. Jeb Bush or U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio, in an early look at the 2016 presidential election, according to a Quinnipiac University poll released today.
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Mrs. Clinton, who shows the most strength of any potential 2016 aspirant in Quinnipiac University’s national polls, leads Jeb Bush 51 – 40 percent and bests Sen. Rubio 52 – 41 percent in a poll of Sunshine State registered voters.
Clinton is viewed much more favorably than either man, 62 – 33 percent favorable for Clinton, compared to 50 – 35 percent favorable for Bush and 41 – 34 percent for Rubio.
“We probably won’t know for some time whether former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton runs for president in 2016, but if she decides to make the race, she begins with a sizable lead in a state that Republicans cannot win the White House without,” said Peter A. Brown, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute. “Florida voters have a very positive view of Mrs. Clinton and it’s not just Democrats who feel that way.”
Mrs. Clinton is viewed favorably by 26 percent of Republicans, not bad for a Democrat who’s had her share of battles with the GOP, and gets a 57 – 35 percent favorability among the key voting group, independents. Not surprisingly, she gets 93 – 5 percent favorability among Democrats. She has a 10-point gender gap: 66 percent of women and 56 percent of men view her favorably.
In a head-to-head with Jeb Bush, Mrs. Clinton would get 10 percent of Republicans while he would only get 4 percent of Democrats. Independent voters are divided 42 percent for Clinton and 41 percent for Bush.
March 7, 2013 - Clinton, Christie Lead The Pack In Early Look At 2016, Quinnipiac University National Poll Finds
Hillary Clinton would defeat three potential Republican presidential candidates if the 2016 presidential election were held today, with New Jersey Gov. Christopher Christie second in a field of three Democrats and three Republicans selected by Quinnipiac University for a national poll released today. Vice President Joseph Biden and New York's Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo would not fare nearly as well, the independent Quinnipiac (KWIN-uh-pe-ack) University poll finds. The Republicans tested also include Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida and U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin. Former First Lady, Senator, and Secretary of State Clinton wins easily against any of the Republicans, topping Christie 45 - 37 percent; leading Rubio 50 - 34 percent and besting Ryan 50 - 38 percent. "Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton would start a 2016 presidential campaign with enormous advantages," said Peter A. Brown, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute. "She obviously is by far the best known and her more than 20 years in the public spotlight allows her to create a very favorable impression on the American people. But it is worth noting that she had very good poll numbers in 2006 looking toward the 2008 election, before she faced a relative unknown in Barack Obama." Christie gets 43 percent to Vice President Biden's 40 percent and tops Cuomo 45 - 28 percent. Biden tops Rubio 45 - 38 percent and gets 45 percent to Ryan's 42 percent. Ryan tops Cuomo 42 - 37 percent while Cuomo and Rubio are tied 37 - 37 percent. "Although some Republicans don't think New Jersey Gov. Christopher Christie is conservative enough for their taste, he runs best of the three Republicans tested and would defeat two of the top Democrats," Brown said. "He obviously is doing better than the Democrats' rising star, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, despite other indications of anti-Republican sentiment." The Democratic edge is seen in the poll finding that voters disapprove of the job Democrats in Congress are doing 60 - 32 percent, compared to an overwhelming 71 - 20 percent disapproval for Republicans in Congress. "The Republican brand is not doing very well these days," said Brown. The difference between the showing by Mrs. Clinton, Biden and Cuomo shows in her ability and their inability to attract independent voters. For instance, Mrs. Clinton ties Christie 36 - 36 percent among independents while Biden trails Christie 44 - 32 percent among those voters. Cuomo trails Christie 47 - 20 percent among independent voters.