BOSTON: Dealing with an anxious electorate, Democrats seems to be turning to Hillary Rodham Clinton to gather support among female voters as polls suggest her party might lose ground among women heading into next month’s elections.
Clinton rallied Democrats on behalf of Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley, who will be running for governor.
“From my perspective, it shouldn’t even really be a race. It should not even be close, but we’re living during an election season where it’s close everywhere,” Clinton said. “And that’s why Martha needs you.”
With the forthcoming election, Hillary Clinton has already started looking at 2016. She is shifting leftward with a line of thought that President Barack Obama used in the 2012 election with some controversy.
At a Boston campaign event for Martha Coakley, Hillary, the Bay State’s Democratic gubernatorial candidate, brought forward a unexpected thought on the private sector. Hillary, rubbing her hands with glee, deal with Reaganomics of the 1980s. Although she expressed criticism which was unusual for a woman who represented Wall Street as a senator.
“Don’t let anybody tell you it’s corporations and businesses that create jobs,” said Clinton. “You know that old theory, ‘trickle-down economics.’ That has been tried, that has failed. It has failed rather spectacularly.”
People might now speculate if Clinton is going to compete with U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., who suggested that no business can deserve complete credit for its founding and the government plays a role in all private-sector birth while she ran for Senate in 2012.
President Obama made his famous “You didn’t build that” line, a line that slipped up his campaign briefly in mid-2012. Obama later apologized for the “syntax” of the remark.
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