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xepp Foreign leaders seek fresh ties with U.S. governors, mayors
« le: Décembre 29, 2024, 06:12:04 pm »
Kbmx WATCH: NYC Mayor de Blasio says protests are largely peaceful, curfew will continue
 AMES, Iowa  Seeking victory in Iowa, Hillary Clinton has begun channeling the economic indignation of her rival Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, whose unapologetically liberal campaign has tightened the race ahead of Monday   caucuses and given him a lead in the New Hampshire contest that follows.Making her closing argument to Iowa caucus-goers, Clinton now cloaks her detailed policy plans in Sanders ; outraged rhetoric. Pharmaceutical pricing burns her up. Companies that take advantage of the tax looph stanley cup oles get her pretty riled up. And she promises to rail away at any industry that flouts the law.I ;m going after all of them she declared in Davenport, her tone escalating to a shout. When I talk about going after those companies, those businesses, those special interests, I have a much broader target list than my op stanley cup ponents.The former secretary of state   fiery new tone underscores a strategic decision to co-opt some of  stanley cup the political style from the insurgent candidate who has galvanized the Democratic party and put her long-held lead in jeopardy. It comes as a new poll released Saturday night by the Des Moines Register and Bloomberg News showed the two candidates locked in a neck-and-neck race. Though Clinton remains likely to win the nomination, a loss in Iowa would complicate her path and heighten Democratic concerns about her campaign. Already some Democrats have voiced concerns ab Wkmu DeLay Indicted on New Money Laundering Charge
 PBS NewsHour senior correspondents Gwen Ifill and Judy Woodruff anchored 50 hours of live coverage of the Democratic a crocs nd Republican conventions in 2012.TV critic David Zurawik of the Baltimore Sun used recent news of layoffs at the PBS NewsHour as an opportunity to review the current state of the longstanding nightly news broadcast. In a column Tuesday headlined Is it time to quit being nice about what NewsHour ; has become  Zurawik questions the value of the program and asks if the show is worth trying to save amid the cutbacks.He goes on to critique the show   format:I ;m sorry, Jeffrey Brown interviewing a New York Times reporter ab af1 out a story she or he broke is not a nightly newscast  not in any sense of what they do on CBS with Scott Pelley or ABC with Diane Sawyer every night. It   more like a cable talk show  or a radio talk show with a camera showing the interviewer and interviewee siting across from each other.In a response to the column, NewsHour senior correspondent Gwen adidas samba  Ifill wrote Zurawik:Is it what NBC, ABC, CBS, FOX and CNN produce on a nightly basis  No. And it never has been. That   pretty much why I work here. We skip the stories on the pole-dancing girlfriends and the Arias-type trials. We know there are other places to go for that. But we still stick by our core mission  to provide news and information for people who choose to know more than what their home browser page can