Sanders
contrasts his record with Clinton's at Iowa dinner
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[October 26, 2015]
By Amanda Becker
DES MOINES, Iowa (Reuters) - U.S.
presidential candidate Bernie Sanders contrasted his record with that of
Hillary Clinton on key issues, including his early support for same-sex
marriages and consistent opposition to the Iraq war, during a Democratic
fundraising dinner in Iowa on Saturday.
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The annual dinner in the early-voting state has become a
bellwether of Democratic support, and it was the first time that
Sanders, Clinton and former Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley have
appeared on the same stage since the first Democratic debate on Oct.
13.
While the debate was a largely genial affair in which the candidates
complimented one another and disagreed on policy specifics, Sanders
used the Jefferson-Jackson dinner, attended by more than 6,000
Democrats, to highlight differences with front-runner Clinton,
without mentioning her by name.
The U.S. senator from Vermont, who calls himself a democratic
socialist, has gained on Clinton in recent polls.
Sanders spoke first and reminded the crowd of his early support for
same-sex marriage, his vote against the U.S. war in Iraq, his
criticism of trade pacts and called opposing the Keystone XL
pipeline to bring Canadian oil to the Gulf of Mexico a “no brainer.”
Each point was a nod to previous positions taken by Clinton or her
husband, former President Bill Clinton, who appeared for the first
time on the campaign trail in Iowa on Saturday.
Bill Clinton signed a 1996 law, which has since been overturned by
the U.S. Supreme Court, that prevented same-sex couples from
receiving federal spousal benefits.
Hillary Clinton, as a U.S. senator from New York, voted to invade
Iraq, but says based on what she knows now that was a mistake.
Clinton recently opposed the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade pact
negotiated by the Obama administration and the Keystone pipeline,
which is under review by the U.S. State Department. Both processes
began when Clinton held the top post at the diplomatic agency.
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A victory in Iowa, which holds the first party-nominating contest on
Feb. 1, can set the tone of a presidential campaign. President
Barack Obama delivered a breakout performance at the 2007
Jefferson-Jackson dinner as a relatively unknown U.S. senator from
Illinois. He went on to win the state.
“About eight years ago all of the political experts talked about how
another Democratic candidate for president just couldn’t win, he was
unelectable,” Sanders said on Saturday. “Remember that guy? What was
his name? Oh, it’s President Obama.”
“Well Iowa, I think we are going to prove the pundits wrong again,”
Sanders added, drawing some of his strongest applause of the night.
(Reporting By Amanda Becker; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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