Under Dodd-Frank, the Fed could in theory raise its capital requirements to such a high level for the largest banks that they quickly decide to break themselves up. But such a path might face stiff legal resistance. As a result, Mr. Sanders’s apparent suggestion that the Treasury secretary could act unilaterally might betray a weak grasp of Dodd-Frank.Or he may simply be confused about what it contains.
Bernie winning in Wisconsin allowed him to close the gap by 6 delegates. Next up is Wyoming which only has 18 delegates up for grabs (for the Dems), so whoever wins is likely to only gain 5 delegates or less on their opponent.
So Hillary is still more than 200 delegates in the lead? And that is without the super-delegates endorsing her too.
New York should settle things for good. Clinton still predicted to win that state. Less than 2 weeks to go until that crucial date.
Latest two polls for PA this week have Clinton winning by +22 and +6 percentage points. Remember for Sanders to win the nomination, he really need to be winning PA by a big margin, as well as the likes of NY, Maryland and California.
Anyways, she's completely right. She needs to keep repeating that over and over again. Make her case regarding how she's the better DEM candidate because she'll get other Dems elected as well.
“I'm the last person who would tell anybody to walk away from a campaign because I remember very well, and I think you commented on this quite a bit, people telling me not to go to the next contest, not to make my case,” Clinton said, referring to her 2008 run for the Democratic nomination, in an interview with MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” on Wednesday.
After taking note of the fact that more than 50% of Americans like Obama again and he's yuugely popular in the Democratic party, Bernie had nothing but praise for him in an interview.
“I'm the last person who would tell anybody to walk away from a campaign because I remember very well, and I think you commented on this quite a bit, people telling me not to go to the next contest, not to make my case,” Clinton said, referring to her 2008 run for the Democratic nomination, in an interview with MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” on Wednesday.
After taking note of the fact that more than 50% of Americans like Obama again and he's yuugely popular in the Democratic party, Bernie had nothing but praise for him in an interview.