With Iowa kicking off the 2016 election season in one week, Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Clinton went into a CNN town hall on Monday with her campaign accusing archrival Bernie Sanders of changing his views for political convenience.
At
the event,
Sanders got in the first salvoes by saying his judgment, not
Clinton's experience, is the most crucial quality for the next
commander-in-chief.
Clinton argues that
as a former secretary of state and former senator from New York, she is
the more experienced White House candidate.
Clinton,
anxious to put down a threat from the democratic socialist, faced the
challenge of convincing Democratic voters not to be swayed by Sanders'
populist rhetoric and promises for more government programs.
The
town hall at Drake University lacked the feel of a normal debate. It
was featuring separate appearances by Sanders, former Maryland Governor
Martin O'Malley and Clinton, in that order. All three were taking
audience questions at the event.
Sanders cited
Clinton's 2002 Senate vote to authorize the Iraq war and her prior
support for the Canada-to-Texas Keystone Pipeline as evidence that her
experience is misguided. Clinton has shifted her position on both
issues, while Sanders opposed both from the start.
"Experience is important but judgment is also important," he said.
Clinton, who lost the Democratic primary to Barack Obama in
2008, was for months the clear front-runner to be the party's nominee
this time around, but opinion polls have showed a surge of support for
Sanders in recent weeks.
She argues that while
Sanders' goals on issues such as social inequality are laudable, some
are unobtainable and he lacks the experience to tackle a wide range of
issues.
"When you're in the White House you
cannot pick the issues you want to work on, you've got to be ready to
take on every issue that comes your way, including those you cannot
predict," Clinton told the Jewish Federation of Greater Des Moines on Monday.
The
Clinton campaign presaged an attack line for Clinton by issuing a news
release accusing Sanders of flip-flopping on a variety of issues, such
as on gun control and whether he would support normalizing U.S.
relations with Iran.
Clinton got some much-needed
praise from President Obama in a Politico interview published on Monday,
exactly a week before Iowans hold the nation's first nominating contest
for the November 8 election.
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