US PRESIDENCY: Clinton Ridicules Sanders, Offers Reform In 100 Days In Office

Hillary Clinton
FORMER US Secretary of State and Presidential candidate on the platform of Democrats, Hillary Diane Rodham Clinton has assured that if elected the President of the United States of America, she would assiduously liaise to have legislation enact comprehensive immigration reform before Congress in her  first 100 days in office.

Hillary, who is married to the Bill Clinton, 42nd President of the US (1992 to 2001) is contending with Senator Bernie Sanders for the ticket of the Democrats in the forthcoming presidential election. In a town hall campaign meeting, Clinton explicitly assured her fans that her administration would be a people-oriented government aimed at moving America forward through essential reforms and policies.


""You are more likely to get a mortgage application if you're white than if you're black or Latino. That has to end."

" We will call on Congress to repeal the 3/10 year bars on immigrants reentering the US. These provisions tear families apart and should end.

"We will call on Congress to repeal the 3/10 year bars on immigrants reentering the US. These provisions tear families apart and should end. 

“I’m going to do everything I can so you don’t have to be scared. Let me do the worrying, is that a deal?”

However, her major opponent, Sanders had on his campaign in Las Vegas criticized the former US President accusing her of deregulating Wall Street thereby allowing the country to face some economic inadequacies.  

"The so-called welfare reform  pushed by the former President ended up increasing extreme poverty in America  for the poorest children in this country," Sanders claimed.

Reacting to the allegation, Hillary debunked it stating that her husband obviously created 23 million jobs in the US adding that African-American families and Latino families had an even higher than average increase in income.

Reacting further on Sanders dispositions, Hillary recalled that President Obama was also recently attacked by Sanders inexplicably with name-calling including labeling the US President as "weak and disappointing" and therefore concluded that the her fellow contender was believably not a true Democrat until his interest to vie on its platform arose.
"I don't know where all this comes from. Maybe, it's that Senator Sanders wasn't really a Democrat until he decided to run for president," Hillary said.

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