CNN Reliable Sources with Brian Stelter November 1, 2020 16:32:15 archive.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from archive.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
found that interesting. the exit polling. yeah, the exit polling there or at least the informal exit polling showing that amy klobuchar is so close to bernie sanders. it s a little bit surprising because everybody thought pete buttigieg would be there. it also kind of goes against what some of the exit polls showed about the people thinking that a woman will have a tougher time to win. i do think that amy klobuchar is uniquely talented in this regard, that she has a sense of humor that is not often easy to find in politicians. and it is such a compelling thing, an unusual thing. she s the funny one up on the stage. and i think that there s something there s a bit of sparkle to that that i think that is underlying a bit of this. she s likeable. she s totally likeable and you are completely right about the i see you bit of it because i think that s really important. anderson, i just wrote a couple things down.
a they go to this one and say it is pretty good and then this these miracles that happen the moments that happen, that s part one, and then somebody clicks. i love the new hampshire primary for this reason and people say of the pain for people who are watching this process. why new hampshire, and i will tell you, because it is a everybody has somebody they wish were in the mix still. microcosm of america except for the minority population there, you have to give klobuchar her but they really check you out due credit. she did it the right way. carefully, and they check you out and analyze you, and you she was principle and smart and don t get away with anything there. found her moment. you have to be real, and it is she found her stride. timing is everything. they re not miracles. very interesting place. and the interviews from the you earn them. voters today, there was a lot campaigns force you to earn them. the ramifications of the this of, too, the previous discussion and peo
you prefer a candidate who can beat trump or agrees with you on the issues and 62%, and from where we sit, just down the street, near the post office, by the park, obviously early exit polling, and 62% to beat trump and if you when we stop and look around, what we see are sparks. had told me that, i would have said that joe biden is happy with that, because the message from the start has been that you sparks of hope, of compassion, of communities may not agree with me on everything, but i am the guy who who stand firm. can beat trump and we agree that when neighbors lift each other up, is the common enemy, but the fact of 6 in 10 people expecting nothing in return. prioritizing electability over we re grateful for what you bring, issue agreement and joe biden on and all the sparks you ve shown, a plane or already in south in the thousands of towns that we get to call home. carolina with, you know, three or 2 1/2 more hours left in new hampshire, i am with bakari, that i learned the d
reach out and tell their case for how they align to our values in the community. lisa: the president got about 28 percent of the hispanic vote in 2016 according to exit polling. what should the president s message be to, one, get those voters back and, two, to build on that number? i think we need to balance the immigration rhetoric that often gets thrown into an anti-hispanic, you know, message, to flip it into showing how are the economic policies, religious freedom policies and the overall well-being of families and hispanic-americans are translating under his administration. and i would invite the same challenge to the other side because i can t remember the . . last time a democratic candidate reached out to the christian community among hispanics. so there is room for putting your case forward, and the president certainly has a lot of things to check off pete: briefly, when i talk to