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Ouch! Congressman Backing Jeb Says His Chance Of Winning "Doesn't Look Good"

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And Trump looks stronger.

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A Nevada congressman who backs Jeb Bush says the former Florida governor's campaign can't win by tearing down Marco Rubio, adding that Bush's chances of winning look slim.

Asked on KNPB's Ralston Live Friday what he thought about Bush and his backers attacking Rubio, Rep. Mark Amodei said, "I don't think you're gonna negative your way to success no matter who you are."

Amodei continued, saying the Bush campaign saw Rubio as their main threat and competition, and that's why his backers have put the crosshairs on the Florida senator.

Asked about Bush's chances to win the nomination, Amodei said, "I don't know, it doesn't look good, I'll tell you that. In one sense, the end of July's a long ways away. Still, in another sense it's a heck of a lot shorter than it was six months ago. If anything, Trump looks stronger."


Obama Moves To Close Gender Pay Gap With New Rules

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Mark Wilson / Getty Images

President Obama on Friday announced a series of actions his administration will take in an effort to close the gender pay gap.

Among the most significant moves will be requiring companies with more than 100 employees to report pay data by gender, race, and ethnicity. The action, the White House said, is meant to "advance equal pay for all workers and to further empower working families."

Obama also urged Congress to pass the Paycheck Fairness Act, and released a report on the state of the gender pay gap.

Friday marked the seventh anniversary of the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, the first piece of legislation Obama signed into law as president. In doing so, he noted the often-cited statistic: that women account for almost half of the workforce, but are paid an average of 79 cents to a man’s dollar.

“The gap’s even wider for women of color,” he added. “A typical black working woman makes only 60 cents. Typical Latina woman makes only 55 cents for every dollar a white man earns. And that’s not right.”

President Obama and Lilly Ledbetter before he signed the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act on Jan. 29, 2009.

Mark Wilson / Getty Images

Lilly Ledbetter, whose 2007 Supreme Court court case on gender pay discrimination would later become the foundation for Obama’s fair pay act, recounted her story on Friday.

A mother of two, Ledbetter was hired at Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company in 1979.

The only female supervisor, Ledbetter took as little time off as possible because she never knew if her job would be waiting for her when she got back.

After working at the tire shop for nearly 20 years, Ledbetter received an anonymous message that she had been earning thousands of dollars per year less than her male counterparts in the same position.

“All I could think about was how much my family had done without over the years, and how I would never catch up to my male co-workers’ salaries,” she said.

However, in 2007, the Supreme Court ruled that discriminatory charges similar to Ledbetter’s needed to be filed within 180 days of the employee’s first unequal paycheck.

She called the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act — which overturned the Supreme Court’s decision and expanded the length of time an employee can file a discrimination lawsuit — a “down payment in this fight.”

Jeb Bush Applauds Vets Initiative For Not Using Federal Assistance (It Did)

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At Thursday night's Republican presidential debate, Jeb Bush praised an initiative that virtually eliminated veteran homelessness in Houston, Texas, and pointed out that it was done without federal assistance.

The coalition of charitable groups, called The Way Home, does in fact partner with multiple federal departments and receives federal funding.

Bush, when asked about the Wounded Warrior Project spending 40% of its donations on administrative expenses the debate, highlighted the initiative, saying, "In Houston, Texas, there's an organization in place because someone acted on their heart, wanted to make sure that there's no homeless veterans in Houston. And they've come pretty close to that without federal government assistance. We need to mobilize the entire country to treat our veterans and treat them with much more respect than they get today.”

The initiative did succeed in drastically reducing homelessness among veterans, but it did so by partnering with the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Veterans Administration. At a ceremony last June in Houston marking the coalition’s success, three Cabinet secretaries attended, and Houston’s mayor, Annise Parker, credited the federal government for its help in reaching the group’s goal.

“From regular provider coordination meetings and aligning local and federal resources, to dedicated street outreach teams… the Houston region has come together as a team to transform our homeless response system to effectively end veteran homelessness,” Parker said.

Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Julian Castro, also present at the ceremony, credited the federal government for its role as well.

“Thanks to our coalition of federal and local leadership, Houston has developed the tools to identify and support every veteran in the city experiencing homelessness,” Castro said.

When asked for comment, a spokesperson for Jeb Bush's campaign told BuzzFeed News, "The point is that this was a local effort that got federal assistance — not a big, top-down federal program. This is in line with Jeb’s long standing support for bottom up programs, not top down federal programs. Reforming the Department of Veterans Affairs and ensuring care for our veterans is a top priority of Governor Bush’s."

State Department Won't Release 22 Emails In Clinton Documents Deemed "Top Secret"

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Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

The State Department said on Friday that the department will not release 22 emails in the cache of emails submitted by Hillary Clinton because the emails have been deemed to be "top secret."

With the Iowa caucuses three days away, the designation is the latest news about about a story — Clinton's use of a personal email account and the private server on which it was housed — that has dominated her presidential campaign over the past year. The seven email threads will not be included in the public release of Clinton's email scheduled for Friday, the AP first reported:

But The Associated Press has learned seven email chains are being withheld in full because they contain information deemed to be "top secret." The 37 pages include messages recently described by a key intelligence official as concerning so-called "special access programs" — a highly restricted subset of classified material that could point to confidential sources or clandestine programs like drone strikes or government eavesdropping.

Department officials wouldn't describe the substance of the emails, or say if Clinton sent any herself. They also wouldn't disclose if any of the documents reflected information that was classified at the time of transmission, but indicated that the agency's Diplomatic Security and Intelligence and Research bureaus have begun looking into that question. [...]

For those that Clinton only read, and didn't write or forward, she still would have been required to report classification slippages that she recognized. But without classification markings, that may have been difficult, especially if the information was in the public domain.

Clinton has maintained that she didn't send or receive information marked classified, though initially when she first discussed the issue, she said she had not sent classified information, and her campaign said that she had a separate system to consume classified information.

Ron Jeremy Is Supporting Hillary Clinton

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The famous porn star also likes Trump and rips Ben Carson: “Get the fuck out of the race, you fucking idiot.”

Charles Sykes / AP

Famous porn star Ron Jeremy told BuzzFeed News in an interview on Friday that he is supporting Hillary Clinton's bid for the White House, in large part because he admires her husband, former president Bill Clinton.

"I got to shake hands with her husband," Jeremy said, noting his admiration for former president Bill Clinton's role in the Norther Irish peace process and his attempts to resolve the Israel-Palestine conflict. "A lot of it's because of him. When he was in office, she gave him a lot of advice. When she's in office, he'll give her a lot of advice."

Jeremy, who identifies as a Democrat, singled out Bill Clinton as his favorite president, and joked about Clinton's affair with Monica Lewinsky. "I got to meet Monica Lewinsky," Jeremy said. "I gave her a cigar and asked her to autograph it. No, I'm kidding. I wouldn't be that mean."

He continued, praising Clinton, "He looks presidential. He smells presidential."

When asked about Clinton's chief rival for the Democratic nomination, Bernie Sanders, Jeremy praised Sanders for being the most sincere candidate, but then mocked the idea of going back on America's capitalist tradition.

"America has spanned decades and decades with capitalism and democracy, we're gonna give it all up because of one schmuck?" he said. "One Jewish schmuck — I can say that because I'm Jewish — one Jewish schmuck wants to become a leader and bring us all into socialism?"

He later argued, "We'll start at socialism, then maybe we'll do a little Nazism, then we'll go to communism. What the fuck?"

Jeremy, who rose to prominence in the adult film industry in the 1980s and is one of the most prolific porn actors ever, also offered up his opinions on the Republican field, including frontrunner Donald Trump, who he said he likes because he's a New Yorker and because Trump stocks his brand of rum at Trump Tower in Panama.

"Everyone loves his passion," he said, "but when it comes down to having a finger on a button, I don't know if I want Donald Trump's finger on the button."

"A lot of what Donald Trump does sounds so good in theory, but in practicality it's not gonna happen," Jeremy added.

And on Dr. Ben Carson, Jeremy said, "He should do what he does best and go back into the OR. Go cure cancer."

"Get the fuck out of the race, you fucking idiot, and do what you do best," he added later.

GOP Senator Wants Andrew Jackson Taken Off The $20 Bill, Citing His "Checkered History"

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“He was a rugged mountain man to say the least, but he was also the one that relocated Native American tribes out of all of the southeast part of the United States and did forcible removal and tens of thousands of Native Americans died on the Trail of Tears and other things.”

Karen Bleier / AFP / Getty Images

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Republican Sen. James Lankford says Andrew Jackson, not Alexander Hamilton, should be the target of the U.S. Department of Treasury if they choose to put a woman on a bill.

The department announced plans earlier last year to put a woman on the $10 bill, but announced in December they would delay the decision on who it would be until sometime this year.

"Well, my better idea is if you are going to replace somebody off of one of the bills —which I have no problem with a lady being on one of the bills — that you would replace the 20," the Oklahoma senator told Kilmeade and Friends this week. "Andrew Jackson has a pretty checkered history."

"He was a rugged mountain man to say the least, but he was also the one that relocated Native American tribes out of all of the southeast part of the United States and did forcible removal and tens of thousands of Native Americans died on the Trail of Tears and other things," he continued. "So if we are going to remove someone, which I have no problem with doing, then let's do the 20 not the 10, the very first Treasury of the Secretary, Alexander Hamilton."

Ted Cruz's Iowa Backers Blast The Attacks From Huckabee Allies

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Christopher Furlong / Getty Images

DES MOINES, Iowa — Two of Ted Cruz's top conservative backers, including one who endorsed Mike Huckabee when he won Iowa eight years ago, are blasting the former governor for his super PAC's attacks on Cruz's Christian faith.

In recent weeks, allies of Huckabee — himself a pastor and social conservative — have unleashed more than a million dollars in attack ads on Cruz, and specifically on whether he's really committed to the evangelical cause and upholding its values.

Key figures in Iowa who now back Cruz aren't pleased at all about the attacks.

"It’s disappointing," Family Leader CEO Bob Vander Plaats, a key Iowa endorser for Cruz, told BuzzFeed News in an interview on Thursday. "And I love Gov. Huckabee as much as if not more than anybody. But it’s disappointing, especially coming from a campaign that’s associated with a pastor, to be questioning somebody’s sincerity in their faith."

Vander Plaats endorsed Huckabee in 2008 when he won the Iowa caucuses.

For someone to say Cruz is a "faux conservative or a faux Christian, I just find that extremely disappointing on many levels. And it does no good for the body of Christ, it does no good for the Christian testimony for that to be taking place," Vander Plaats said.

Iowa Rep. Steve King, who along with Vander Plaats has been frequently appearing on the campaign trail with Cruz, told BuzzFeed News when asked about the ads on Thursday that he considered attacks on someone's faith a "cardinal sin."

"I think that when you start attacking somebody's faith, especially when you don't know, that is a cardinal sin, and they're going to have to explain that to St. Peter," King said.

A super PAC supporting Huckabee called Pursuing America's Greatness has launched TV and radio ads in Iowa that feature two women talking about Cruz and discussing his leaked comments to donors about not prioritizing fighting same-sex marriage and his record on tithing. Tax returns released during Cruz's 2012 Senate campaign showed that he had given less than one percent of his income to charity between 2006 and 2010, less than the 10% advocated by scripture.

Though it's a super PAC and not Huckabee's campaign itself who have produced the ads, Huckabee himself has publicly criticized Cruz over his tithing record.

“I just think it’s hard to say God is first in your life if he’s last in your budget," Huckabee told BuzzFeed News in an interview last week.

Vander Plaats and King aren't the only Cruz endorsers who aren't happy about the attacks.

Family Research Council president Tony Perkins, who endorsed Cruz on Tuesday, said in an interview on Wednesday he had heard of the ads but had not seen them and had not yet spoken with Cruz about them. But he said that he would prefer that campaign season attacks be based on policy, not on personal matters.

"I would prefer that evangelical candidates not attack each other, period," Perkins told BuzzFeed News. "And if you’re going to draw distinctions, do it on policy."

Perkins, who backed Huckabee in 2008, noted that the issue was likely being raised because "for evangelicals it's an issue as to whether or not someone tithes."

This time around, Vander Plaats and Perkins are among the key religious conservative endorsements for Cruz, who has effectively locked up evangelical support in Iowa and marginalized previous favorites like Huckabee and Rick Santorum.

Cruz himself has struck a much less aggressive tone in responding to the questions raised about his tithing, acknowledging that "I have not been as faithful in this aspect of my walk as I should have been" in an interview with Christian Broadcast News.

Reached by email, Nick Ryan, the operative who runs Pursuing America's Greatness, defended the ads and sharply criticized Vander Plaats and King.

"Steve King is an embarrassment to Iowa," Ryan said in an email. "As a constituent of his, I look forward to Feb. 2 so the process to replace him as my congressman can begin.”

Ryan said of Vander Plaats, whom he called a friend, "He has never expressed any concern or problem with the ad to me. Bob is very charitable with his time and I’m sure this concerns him as much as Ted Cruz’s dangerous position on traditional marriage, which flies in the face of everything Bob believes about the protection of biblical marriage. I’m sure he struggles with that part of Ted Cruz too.”

Ryan echoed Huckabee's comments to BuzzFeed News last week, saying, "He’s a millionaire with a spouse that works at Goldman Sachs and his campaign touts faith in God first, so it’s hard to imagine how God ends up last in his budget.”

In an email, Nick Everhart, who made the ads for the super PAC, criticized the criticisms, saying, "They are terrified they made a bad business decision, this has nothing to do with appropriateness of challenging Ted Cruz's strategically and intentionally thought out exploitation of believers."

Huckabee himself has struggled to gain traction this year in Iowa, and has seemed increasingly aggrieved in recent weeks over Cruz's success with evangelicals. He has embraced Cruz's main rival Donald Trump, appearing with him on Thursday night at Trump's veterans-themed event he held instead of going to the debate, and in a radio interview on Friday he dismissed his former evangelical endorsers.

In an interview this week, he claimed he didn't have the support of evangelical leaders in 2008 when he won the caucuses. "What people forget is eight years ago the evangelical leaders didn't rally around me or support me," he said. (In 2008, he received the endorsement of Liberty University president Jerry Falwell Jr., James Dobson of Focus on the Family, Perkins, and Vander Plaats.)

"A lot of the people did, but the leaders supported Romney, or McCain, many of them supported Thompson and quite frankly if the evangelicals had truly rallied with me, I think I would have gone on to win the nomination without any doubt."

In recent weeks, he's also claimed that the reason evangelical leaders have not backed him is because they are afraid they will be unable to fundraise if he implements Christian policy.

Huckabee campaign spokesman Hogan Gidley said he had seen the ads and they are "absolutely positively not an attack on Ted Cruz’s faith. It’s an attack on Ted Cruz’s honesty."

"He has been caught now on multiple occasions saying one thing in Muscatine and another thing to a crowd in Manhattan," Gidley said. (Ryan said, "The ad clearly depicts Manhattan Ted is different than Muscatine Ted.")

A Cruz campaign spokesman did not return a request for comment.

Andrew Kaczynski contributed reporting.

Trump: "I Think I Did A Smart Thing" Avoiding "Tough" Videos At Debate

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“They really attacked with those videos. And Megyn was, you know, like, really attacking.”

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Republican presidential frontrunner Donald Trump said on Friday that he thinks he did a "smart thing" skipping Thursday night's Fox News debate, in part because the network aired videos taking some of the candidates to task for their past statements.

"Boy did they go after them. And hey, Howie, I think I did a smart thing," Trump told Boston radio host Howie Carr, laughing. "They really attacked with those videos. And Megyn was, you know, like, really attacking."

Trump said if moderator Megyn Kelly, whose presence at the debate was partly behind his decision to skip the event, had attacked him, he "would've had a much different attitude."

"But I will say this, a couple of them wanted to leave the debate stage — you saw that, right?" Trump asked, referring to a moment in the debate when Ted Cruz said he was going to leave the stage after receiving a series of pointed questions. The hosts pushed back, arguing that Cruz made the comment in jest.

"I don't know, jokingly," Trump responded. "Those videos were pretty tough, I thought. And I don't think anyone knew. I didn't know about it. I didn't know they were doing videos."

Trump later added that he thought Fox News would have had "about 10" of the videos, which were directed at Cruz and Marco Rubio, ready for him.

Asked how he would have responded, he said, "I don't know. I mean, it depends. I'm pretty used to getting some pretty tough questions, in all fairness."

In the interview, Trump also offered some backhanded support for the idea that Jeb Bush had his best debate without the reality TV star present.

"You know, look, the man has spent a hundred million on ads, he's working very hard," Trump said. "I would say, let him have his head, let's see what happens, all right?"


The Bernie Bros Are A Problem And The Sanders Campaign Is Trying To Stop Them

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Timothy A. Clary / AFP / Getty Images

FAIRFIELD, Iowa — The internet is home to the best of the Bernie Sanders campaign — the grassroots, youth-powered, bottom-up energy of social media fueled Sanders’s challenge to Hillary Clinton.

But the social web has also shown off the worst of Sanders supporters. Writing in her endorsement of Clinton this week, progressive writer Joan Walsh complained of harassment from online supporters of Sanders that the Vermont senator's campaign aides have been aware of for months. Walsh called them “the Berniebot keyboard warriors,” but they’re more commonly referred to as the Bernie Bros.

In fact, top Sanders campaign aides have quietly reached out to senior officials in the Clinton campaign and women like Walsh personally to apologize for Bro behavior. Online, aides are pushing their digital community to police itself and keep the Bros quiet. And some volunteer members of Sanders’s digital army are scrambling into action, reporting offenders and moderating bro-y posts.

Still, the Bros break through, and there’s real worry in corners of Sanders-world about it.

On Thursday, the BBC catalogued social media attacks on black pundits and women who opine on Bernie. Mashable posted a ton of screenshots of Bro attacks Friday morning.

“Their vaginas are making terrible choices!” wrote a Sanders supporter in the comments under a photo of New Hampshire Sen. Jeanne Shaheen and Clinton. The New Yorker’s Emily Nussbaum recently complained of being called a “psycho” and a “bitch” on Twitter after saying something positive about Clinton.

A lot of the Bernie Bro activity is short of that kind of open harassment, and is more shouty explaining, or smug "mansplaining." It is, though, a style of discourse that's anathema to the progressive, feminist quarters of the internet that share many of Sanders' policy views.

In her essay, Walsh described their “fascinating and stunningly sexist reactions” to her support for Clinton and wrote it was especially tied to the fact that her daughter is a Clinton staffer. Her daughter also gets hit with sexist social media trolling by accounts purported to be run by Sanders supporters, Walsh said.

Women who support Clinton — or work for her and support her — have consistently cited a barrage of sexist attacks across social media. In the manner of GamerGate trolls or men's rights activists, according to women who have dealt with them, Bernie Bros swarm, pummeling their chosen target with tweets. It’s become a trope among women who work in politics or cover it.

Online feminist activist and television writer Nina Bargiel tweeted this arch take on life with the Bernie Bros: “The best safeword is ‘Bernie Sanders’ because the second you use it 17 people show up to yell at you,” she wrote.

The tweet was quickly retweeted by many women in politics, among them Jezebel founder Anna Holmes. They speak often of the prevalence of Bernie Bro attacks.

There’s a racial aspect, too. From the earliest days of Sanders’s campaign, white Sanders supporters dismissed or harassed Black Lives Matter protesters who criticized Sanders. This was a break from the candidate’s reaction to them — Sanders sat down with protest groups and made championing their cause a centerpiece of his campaign.

Bros are pretty confident their bro-ing is a service to Bernie.

An Ohio graduate student who tweeted at Walsh, "I'm tired of @HillaryClinton channelling resentment to run as the female. What if Barack did that as a black man?" explained to the BBC that the tone of his critiques was carefully crafted.

"I target these talking heads in the media who have a high perch, these great liberal thought leaders, when they're not — they're tools of bourgeois," he told the British broadcaster.

None of this is a surprise to people who work in the Sanders campaign or support it online, and the fact that it continues to exist worries them. Every minute and every caucus-goer counts in an Iowa race that Sanders alternated between calling “nip and tuck” and “tied” on the trail Thursday.

This is not to say that hyper-aggressive digital supporters are solely a Sanders problem. New York progressive pundit Jonathan Chait argued that Sanders supporters aren’t “especially mean” versus other partisan digital hordes. And at a campaign stop here Thursday, actress and Sanders surrogate Susan Sarandon said Clinton supporters have come after her with gendered attacks too. Sarandon said she has suffered "a lot of sexist talk because I chose to support Bernie Sanders and not a woman."

But the Sanders campaign and the Sanders digital army are aware that the Bros are a real issue, a dangerous and unruly crowd that can shock even the closest Sanders supporters. And so, at the Burlington, Vermont, Sanders headquarters, they’re trying to do something about it.

Shortly after Monday night’s Iowa Democratic candidate town hall in Des Moines, Sanders’ director of rapid response, Mike Casca, tweeted a simple but urgent request to the Sanders’s digital cohort. Cool it, he begged. The tweet is now permanently pinned to the top of his feed.

“if you support @berniesanders, please follow the senator's lead and be respectful when people disagree with you,” he implored.

The Iowa town hall hosted by CNN, the last nationally televised forum where all three candidates would share the same stage before the Iowa caucuses, was seen by all sides as a tipping point for the Bros — on Twitter, they ravaged Clinton supporters while Sanders backers looked on in dismay.

Behind the scenes, Casca reached out to the Clinton rapid response director, Christina Reynolds, and to Walsh, via direct message onTwitter to apologize for the Bro behavior.

Alex Wong / Getty Images

For Sanders aides like Casca — young, progressive, digitally literate — the fight against the Bernie Bros is personal and impassioned. Under Casca’s direction, the campaign has promised to do a better job of policing its digital ranks.

“The digital space is so critical to Sen. Sanders’ success and because of that we want to work to make it safer for everyone to come and exchange ideas — no matter which candidate they support,” he told BuzzFeed News in an email. “That should be a goal of all the campaigns. We all know there’s already enough hate on the internet.”

The effort has not gone unnoticed. A prominent woman who backs Clinton and has been trolled by the Bernie Bros asked that Casca’s efforts be included in any story written about them. “He is in a field apart when it comes to taking the high road and asking their supporters to follow,” she said.

On Reddit, Sanders’s digital director, Héctor Sigala, told Sanders’s digital army to join the fight against the Bros. The campaign speaks very frankly with its digital cadre, whose volunteer efforts are a huge part of Sanders’s current success and whose political and grassroots sophistication is the envy of most of the candidates running for president this cycle.

Sigala’s message: The Bros are making it tougher for Bernie and they need to stop.

“We love our supporters and we know we wouldn't be here without you all, but it does add a layer of complexity when we have to track what you all do during some moments when we are shaping our messaging,” he wrote. “Above all: just know you represent our movement and be respectful with those who disagree with you.”

Walsh said she senses the Sanders campaign is aware of what is going on, and urged the campaign to step up its efforts to push back.

“I think they are getting concerned that they have this set of keyboard warriors who revel in insulting women, not just Hillary,” she told BuzzFeed News. “I think they just have to get that message out more aggressively. I don't blame Sen. Sanders personally, at all. But it is disturbing to see such a misogynist strain in the male left. It's not a new thing, but it's tough to experience.”

Online supporters of Bernie are also frustrated by the Bros.

Kate Isham is a “Call Team Mentor” on the Sanders Reddit page, a big part of the online volunteer base Sanders regularly activates for phone banks and fundraising. She told BuzzFeed News she has stepped in when she sees Bro-ishness, and that being a woman who participates in the online space, she’s had to develop a thick skin of her own when it comes to bro-ish behavior in general.

“I honestly mostly roll my eyes at it. I'm kind of inured to rhetoric like that at this point,” she said. “My main concern is how it reflects on us, and so I do either try to call someone in on how that makes potential supporters feel and remind them why we're here and that we're in this together.”

Isham has reported users who fire off the “more far-out there” stuff, she said.

Reporting is often not well-received, Bernie redditor u/Polyneophite told BuzzFeed News. (The user preferred to be identified only by the Reddit handle.)

“On regards to how often I say that [to them] at least a few times a day online, sometimes much more often. Sometimes I don't see any,” Polyneophite wrote in a private message (PM) exchange when asked how often Bros need to be called out for potentially costing Sanders support.

“The usual response is a knee-jerk down vote in response, sometimes an angry PM,” Polyneophite went on. “Got told to kill myself once, not really surprising. More common than the angry PM is a response saying something like, ‘You are right, Bernie wouldn't talk that way.’ I count those as wins.”

Online Sanders supporters always stress in conversation that the vast majority of Sanders supporters aren’t Bros — and they claim many of the so-called Bros can in fact regularly be found posting in conservative forums.

“The internet is full of angry trolls looking for reactions, with Media already spinning stories of Bernie supporters being all young white men it doesn't take much to raise tempers, which is really all that some people are after,” Polyneophite wrote. “There are sexist Bernie supporters of course, but I find them easier to correct. Generally a ‘hey, thats pretty sexist’ puts an immediate end to that. Then users with names like /TRUMPTRUMPTRUMP show up to yell about PC police ruining everything.”

Curating the internet, cleansing it of its general nasty tone that erupts at any controversy, minor or major, is of course one of the hardest challenges of the digital age. Supporters point to the Reddit page, the central command center of the Sanders volunteer mothership. Policing is heavy on the page, and women who support Sanders say it works. A place where trolls feel unsafe on Reddit is rare, and the Sanders supporters are proud of what they say they have created there.

“I think it's ironic, because of all the online supporter spaces I've been in, Reddit is one of the least prone to this kind of bad behavior despite Reddit's reputation as an anti-feminist space,” Isham told BuzzFeed News. ”I don't think it's because Reddit is inherently a virtuous space; we moderate that community tightly, and then once people realize bad behavior will result in you being shown the door, it encourages other people to behave civilly.”

It's Three Days Until Iowa So All The Republicans Put On Quarter-Zip Sweaters

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Casual and carefree.

Like, you can wear a quarter-zip in baby blue.

Like, you can wear a quarter-zip in baby blue.

Joe Raedle / Getty Images

You can wear a quarter-zip in navy.

You can wear a quarter-zip in navy.

Brendan Hoffman / Getty Images


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Nebraska Senator Drops Beastmode Trolling Bomb On Donald Trump And His Fingers

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Conservatives and libertarians have been mocking the size of Trump’s hands.

Just to drive him a little bit crazy, I took to referring to him as a 'short-fingered vulgarian' in the pages of Spy magazine. That was more than a quarter of a century ago. To this day, I receive the occasional envelope from Trump. There is always a photo of him—generally a tear sheet from a magazine. On all of them he has circled his hand in gold Sharpie in a valiant effort to highlight the length of his fingers. I almost feel sorry for the poor fellow because, to me, the fingers still look abnormally stubby. The most recent offering arrived earlier this year, before his decision to go after the Republican presidential nomination. Like the other packages, this one included a circled hand and the words, also written in gold Sharpie: 'See, not so short!' I sent the picture back by return mail with a note attached, saying, 'Actually, quite short.' Which I can only assume gave him fits.


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If De Blasio Sees Cruz In Iowa, He'll Tell Him Not To "Spit In The Face Of NYers"

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Bill de BURNio.

Bryan Thomas / Getty Images

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New York Bill de Blasio, who is heading out west to campaign for Hillary Clinton this weekend ahead of the Iowa caucuses, said that should he run into Texas Sen. Ted Cruz (he won't), he will demand an apology for Cruz's linking of Donald Trump to so-called "New York Values."

"He likes taking New York money and then he attacks New York values, absolutely hypocritical," said the mayor on WABC radio's Election Central with Rita Cosby. "One of the few times I've agreed with Donald Trump was his response to Ted Cruz in that debate, and I thought Donald Trump did that very effectively and very fairly. To remind Ted Cruz that not only is New York City in many ways the greatest city in this nation, but the city withstood the worst attack that we've suffered attack on our soil as a result of terrorism and overcame it."

At the Republican debate earlier this month, Cruz and Trump tussled over what the Texas senator derogatorily referred to as "New York values."

"I think Ted Cruz embarrassed himself that day, he still never apologized to the people of New York City which I think is really a sad commentary on how opportunistic he is," Mr. Mayor added.

And, he said, if he runs into Cruz, he'd ask him to apologize.

"Oh, I will certainly ask for an apology, I asked for it publicly, if I see him in person I will gladly tell him, very bluntly, that you don't spit in the face of New Yorkers and then ask for our money. We need an apology if he even wants to get the time of day from the people in New York City."

Campaign Pushes Bill Clinton’s Message: Hillary Is “Change-Maker, Not A Change-Talker”

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In a new web ad, Bill Clinton makes a closing argument to Iowa voters.

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DES MOINES, Iowa — Two days before the first voting contest of the Democratic primary, Hillary Clinton's campaign put forward a closing argument to Iowa voters for a "change-maker, not a change-talker" — as explained by Bill Clinton.

A three-minute campaign video, provided in advance of its release on Saturday, presents the former president's impassioned narrative-based case for Hillary Clinton. Put by her husband, she's the candidate who can deliver on promises to make people's lives better, and has for decades, even outside of elected office.

"She made everything she ever touched better," Bill Clinton says in the video, a compilation of backstage footage and clips from the former president's recent speeches in Iowa and New Hampshire, set against instrumental music.

"Here’s what I know about Hillary. She’s the single best change-maker I’ve ever met in my life. And we need a change-maker, not a change-talker. A change-maker."

Aides have embraced Bill Clinton's telling of the experience-centric message the candidate is pushing in the race here against Sen. Bernie Sanders, alluded to in the clip as the "change-talker." The Clintons made their first "Get Out The Caucus" appearance together on Friday before 1500 people in Davenport, the eastern left-leaning city.

In one scene, Bill Clinton is shown telling a small group of voters, "It’s hard work. It’s policy. The country needs somebody who can actually get something done."

He offers voters three examples ("I’ll tell you a couple stories you may not know") from their time in Arkansas, labeled "Exhibits 1-3" in the video. Hillary, he says in the clip, worked to improve the state's mismanaged school system, juvenile prison system, and early childhood education. The program she helped bring from Israel to Arkansas in the 1980s, called the Home Instruction Program for Preschool Youth, or HIPPY, has now helped thousands of children across 26 states, he says:

She comes in one day just jumping up and down happy... 'I found it. I found a preschool program in Israel that teaches people to be their children’s first teachers, even if they’re illiterate. I think it would work here.' I said, 'Well, what are we going to do?' She said, 'I did it. I called the woman who started it. She’ll be here in 10 days, and we’re gonna start this program.' Now, here’s what happened. Next thing I know I’m going to these little graduations for preschoolers. Next thing you know it’s in 26 states. It’s still thriving. and there are thousands of people in this country who have better lives and learned more, just because of her. And they have no clue, and she didn’t care, and she hadn’t been elected to anything.

"She just made something good happen," Bill Clinton says. "Everything I have told you, I believe with my own heart. She’s the best person to win the election, the best person to implement the changes we need, economically and socially. The best person to preserve the gains we’ve made under President Obama."

Gay Republicans Take Aim At Clinton's Prior Marriage Equality Opposition In Web Ad

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A clip in a new web ad from Log Cabin Republicans shows then-Sen. Hillary Clinton, speaking in defense of marriage between a man and a woman on the Senate floor, in 2004.

WASHINGTON — With the clock ticking down to Caucus Day in Iowa, the head of an organization of gay Republicans says his group is trying draw attention to "the historical larceny taking place in the Clinton campaign" when it comes to the former secretary of state's record on LGBT rights.

Using clips from Hillary Clinton opposing marriage equality during her time in the Senate more than a decade ago, Log Cabin Republicans on Saturday morning launched a web ad accusing Clinton of being "wrong on gay rights when it mattered."

To add insult to injury, the group counters the three clips it uses of Clinton opposing same-sex couples' marriage rights in 2002 and 2004 with one of her key primary opponent, Sen. Bernie Sanders, talking this past fall about how "leadership counts ... when the going is tough."

A still from the new web ad by Log Cabin Republicans:

A still from the new web ad by Log Cabin Republicans:

Asked about the ad, Log Cabin Republicans President Gregory Angelo told BuzzFeed News via email, "Someone needed to point out the revisionist history taking place — and it certainly wasn't going to be gay Democrats."

Asked who Log Cabin sees as being better than Clinton on "gay rights," Angelo dodged, responding, "Naming a 'better' Republican candidate for president on gay rights is unrelated to setting the record straight on Hillary Clinton's real record on gay rights, which Democrats and the LGBT community seem to be ignoring."

Sanders, however, regularly points to Clinton's "evolution" on marriage equality and to his opposition to the Defense of Marriage Act in 1996 — legislation signed into law by Clinton's husband, President Bill Clinton — in his public speeches and in debates and other events.

Additionally, it's also notable that the group used a clip of Sanders in 2015, because as late as 2006 — after the Clinton clips — Sanders still had not yet endorsed marriage equality, instead siding with civil unions.

At the end of the ad, when identifying Log Cabin Republicans as being behind it, the ad also contains a disclosure noting that — predictably — the group does not endorse either of the candidates featured in the ad.

In fact, Angelo said that his group does not endorse in primaries, presidential or otherwise, adding, "We have members across the country who personally support a number of the current GOP candidates for the nation's highest office."

Although the group did not endorse President George W. Bush's re-election in the 2004 general election due to the president's support for the Federal Marriage Amendment, the group did endorse John McCain and Mitt Romney over Barack Obama in 2008 and 2012, respectively.

Watch the full Log Cabin Republican web ad:

youtube.com

Sanders, Clinton Campaigns Agree To More Debates

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Timothy A. Clary / AFP / Getty Images

MANCHESTER, Iowa — The campaigns of the two major candidates for the Democratic nomination have agreed to hold four more debates, should they be sanctioned, sources from both the Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders campaigns tell BuzzFeed News.

The details — where and when — remain unresolved, and the Democratic National Committee has not yet agreed to the arrangement, the Clinton and Sanders sources said.

Both sides, still in separate negotiations with DNC officials, have agreed to attend the “unsanctioned” Feb. 4 debate in New Hampshire hosted by the Union Leader and MSNBC, should that event go forward, in addition to three others, to be held at later dates. The New Hampshire debate would take place just days before the primary there.

After news broke of the tentative arrangement, disagreements between Clinton's and Sanders' campaigns over the location and timing of additional debates spilled out into the open, with the Sanders campaign issuing a strongly-worded statement Saturday afternoon aimed at the Clinton campaign.

"We agreed pending an agreement on three future debates in March, April and May. Unfortunately, the Clinton campaign has not accepted debates we proposed on March 3 in Michigan and April 14 in New York," Bernie Sanders’ campaign manager, Jeff Weaver said in a statement. "They apparently agreed to May 24 in California. The Clinton campaign, after not accepting Michigan, now says they want it. We are pleased to do it on March 3 before the Michigan primary provided the Clinton campaign will agree to Brooklyn, New York, on April 14. Why won't they debate in Brooklyn? What's the matter with Brooklyn?"

Aides to Sanders campaign told BuzzFeed News earlier on Saturday that they are still concerned about the timing of any additional debates, insisting that those after the Feb. 4 face-off be as high-profile and positioned for a wide audience before the key nominating contests. Sanders aides have said they want the debates to happen before contests that will award a large percentage of total delegates.

Before the Sanders campaign issued its statement, Clinton's campaign had expressed their desire for a debate to be held in Flint, Michigan, where a water-contamination crisis has drawn national scrutiny and outrage.

“We’ve agreed to an additional debate in NH and are currently in discussions to agree to additional debates – we think one of them should be in Flint," said Clinton campaign chair John Podesta. "We should use the spotlight of the presidential campaign to keep the focus on Flint, and to lift up the historic underlying issues that Flint and too many other predominantly low income communities of color across America are struggling with every day."

Martin O’Malley’s campaign has expressed willingness to debate any time, anywhere. MSNBC, meanwhile, is proceeding as though the New Hampshire debate, which will be moderated by NBC News' Chuck Todd and MSNBC anchor Rachel Maddow, will take place.

A DNC official told BuzzFeed News that the Union Leader will not be a debate sponsor in New Hampshire under any agreement reached between the party and the campaigns. As for the expanded calendar, "still waiting for final sign off more generally from the campaigns on any debate(s)," the official told BuzzFeed News via text message. The DNC “sanctions” all debates, and has been resistant in recent weeks to adding more officially sanctioned debates to the calendar.


Cruz Endorser Questions Authenticity Of Mailers That Campaign Confirmed Were Real

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Joe Raedle / Getty Images

AMES, Iowa — Iowa radio host Steve Deace, a top Ted Cruz endorser in this state, claimed on Saturday that controversial mailers sent to Iowa voters by the Cruz campaign were inauthentic, despite the fact that the campaign itself confirmed they were real.

Deace later acknowledged having erred, tweeting that he "stands corrected" and that, "The mailer that has Team Rubio upset is in fact from the Cruz campaign."

On Friday, Iowa Twitter user Tom Hinkeldey tweeted photos of a mailer his wife received that was marked "VOTING VIOLATION" and listed her name as well as the names of some of their neighbors, with text saying "You are receiving this election notice because of low expected voter turnout in your area. Your individual voting history as well as your neighbors’ are public record. Their scores are published below, and many of them will see your score as well. CAUCUS ON MONDAY TO IMPROVE YOUR SCORE and please encourage your neighbors to caucus as well. A follow-up notice may be issued following Monday’s caucuses." The mailer was marked "paid for by Cruz for President."

Later, another Twitter user tweeted a photo of the same mailer:

The Cruz campaign confirmed on Friday night to Independent Journal's Sarah Rumpf that the mailers were theirs.

The mailers caused a bit of controversy on Friday night as an especially aggressive example of campaign direct mail. "Shaming people into voting is a great way to get them to vote for somebody else if they decide to do so," RedState's Jay Caruso wrote on Friday.

On Saturday morning, Deace claimed that the mailer was "fake."

Deace also appeared to claim that a quote in the IJ story attributed to Cruz spox Rick Tyler was fake:

Cruz press secretary Catherine Frazier told BuzzFeed News on Saturday morning that Deace "was tweeting because someone had told him that the mailers were fake," but that Deace "is aware of the backstory now."

Frazier reiterated that "we have confirmed that the mailer is ours," and said "these are mailers that have been used by the Iowa Republican Party before as an effective way to turn out voters that haven’t showed up."

"We’re going to be doing everything we can to turn out Iowans," she said, adding that Iowans are used to receiving lots of mailers.

Deace didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

Hinkeldey, who originally tweeted the mailer, tweeted at Deace on Saturday, "I want an apology. In my 29 years of life I've never been accused of not being a real human."

Cruz, who often jokes on the trail in Iowa that campaign mailers make good kindling, is trailing Donald Trump in the polls in Iowa two days out from the caucuses.

Creeping Sharia? Free Trump Tattoos Feature Prominent Islamic Symbol

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Make Ameri☪a Great Again!

A local tattoo artist in New Hampshire is offering free tattoos of Donald Trump’s signature slogan, “Make America Great Again.”

A local tattoo artist in New Hampshire is offering free tattoos of Donald Trump’s signature slogan, “Make America Great Again.”

NH1

"Trump is the only one that's giving anybody any hope to do anything different in this country," said Bob Holmes of Clay Dragon Tattoo."


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Iowa Secretary Of State Rebukes Cruz For Controversial Mailers

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AMES, Iowa — Iowa's secretary of state rebuked Ted Cruz's presidential campaign on Saturday for controversial mailers that told voters they had committed a "voting violation" by not voting.

"Today I was shown a piece of literature from the Cruz for President campaign that misrepresents the role of my office, and worse, misrepresents Iowa election law," Paul Pate, the Iowa secretary of state, said in a statement distributed by his office. "Accusing citizens of Iowa of a 'voting violation' based on Iowa Caucus participation, or lack thereof, is false representation of an official act. There is no such thing as an election violation related to frequency of voting. Any insinuation or statement to the contrary is wrong and I believe it is not in keeping in the spirit of the Iowa Caucuses."

The mailers, sent out to some Iowa voters ahead of the caucuses by Cruz's campaign, are marked "VOTING VIOLATION" and list people's names in addition to their neighbors', with "grades" attached based on their voting participation record, calling on them to caucus to "improve your score." Some Iowans tweeted photos of the mailers on Friday, drawing attention from people on Twitter due to the aggressive nature of the mail. The Cruz campaign confirmed on Friday that it had sent the mailers.

At the bottom of the mailer, the text says "Voting registration and voter history records are public records distributed by the Iowa Secretary of State and/or county election clerks. This data is not available for use for commercial purposes — use is limited by law. Scores reflect participation in recent elections."

In the statement sent out on Saturday, Pate, a Republican, said those claims are false.

"Additionally, the Iowa Secretary of State's Office never 'grades' voters," Pate said in the statement. "Nor does the Secretary of State maintain records related to Iowa Caucus participation. Caucuses are organized and directed by the state political parties, not the Secretary of State, nor local elections officials. Also, the Iowa Secretary of State does not 'distribute' voter records. They are available for purchase for political purposes only, under Iowa Code.”

Cruz's campaign issued a statement on Saturday afternoon, saying the type of mailer they used is "common practice."

"These mailers are common practice to increase voter turnout," said Matt Schultz, the Cruz campaign's Iowa state chairman and former Iowa secretary of state. "Our mailer was modeled after the very successful 2014 mailers that the Republican Party of Iowa distributed to motivate Republican voters to vote, and which helped elect numerous Republican candidates during that cycle.”

Clinton Iowa Volunteers Train When To Push Backers To O'Malley — To Block Bernie

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The three candidates in Iowa in October.

Charlie Neibergall / AP

Hillary Clinton's campaign for president is instructing its Iowa caucus leaders to — in certain cases — throw support to former Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley, with the goal blocking her main opponent, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, from securing additional delegates.

The tactical move is rooted in the complex math of the Iowa caucuses Monday night, where the campaign is looking to defeat Sanders in a state whose caucus-goers have historically backed progressive challengers.

A precinct captain, Jerome Lehtola, confirmed to BuzzFeed News that the campaign has trained precinct captains to release supporters to O'Malley if the move can make him "viable" without hurting Clinton. A Clinton aide said the campaign has trained more than 4,000 volunteer precinct captains to handle a host of different scenarios, including ones where caucus-goers are released to or recruited from another camp.

"Our precinct leadership teams have worked hard to get to know as many people in their precincts as possible and they'll use those relationships to maximize Hillary Clinton's delegate count depending on which groups are viable on caucus night," the aide said.

The goal, in the caucuses' complex terms, is to cost Clinton no delegates in the state's 1,681 caucuses while ensuring stray O'Malley supporters don't defect to Sanders.

This kind of tactical maneuvering is an old Iowa pattern, part of what a former Iowa aide to John Kerry in 2004, Addisu Demissie, described as being part of the state's "brilliantly, gloriously, esoterically small-d democratic" tradition. (Demissie describes the caucus math in excruciating detail in his piece.) The Clinton and Obama campaigns played similar tactical games in 2008, and a deal between Obama's and Bill Richardson's campaigns was controversial enough to be kept top secret at the time. At the time, outraged Clinton aides called reporters to denounce the deal.

This time around, there is no indication that an agreement is involved.

"We're urging all of Gov. O'Malleys supporters to hold strong on caucus night, and we welcome all of Secretary Clinton's supporters to back a real progressive who has actually gotten things done and can build on president Obama's progress," said O'Malley spokeswoman Lis Smith. "Come on over, the water is warm!"

A Clinton precinct captain in Iowa Falls, Jerome Lehtola, shows off Clinton's caucus app.

Ben Smith / BuzzFeed

And in 2016, of course, there's an app for that.

The software, which Lehtola showed BuzzFeed News on his iPhone, allows them to enter the complete number of attendees at a given caucus, and then to divvy them up by candidate. The app shows how many supporters each candidate needs to reach their thresholds. Precinct captains can then calculate easily whether, say, Clinton can — without cost to her own delegate count — boost O'Malley to a viability. And they've been trained, Lehtola said, in that maneuver.

A senior Sanders caucus strategist, who also spoke on background, allowed that caucus rules allow for these kind of math games, but said the Sanders campaign has no similar plan. They have trained their volunteers to play it straight, the strategist said — try to get as many people to the caucus site as possible, and then try to recruit caucus goers from among the candidates not deemed to be viable.

A spokesperson reacted much more strongly.

"It's sad and telling that their campaign doesn't think they can win without these kinds of tactics," said Rania Batrice, Sanders's Iowa spokesperson. "At the end of the day though, we believe in the caucus process and know it's in the very capable hands of Iowans."

Still, the tactic depends on the willingness of Clinton's supporters to act tactically, and everyday Iowans don't always make disciplined cadres.

"That's what they told us in the training sessions — I'm not sure how well it's going to work," said Lehtola, 69, a retired hospital worker who is a Clinton's precinct captain in Iowa Falls, and who showed off the app's ease of use to a BuzzFeed News reporter.

Lehtola, standing in back as supporters waited to hear form former President Bill Clinton, said he was most worried about the deep divisions between Clinton and Sanders supporters, and among Americans more broadly.

"I'm a Vietnam vet, and I'm just hoping it doesn't get that ugly again in this country, " he said. "It's so polarized again."

Donald Trump Landed His Plane To The "Air Force One" Movie Theme

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“GET OFF MY PLANE!” — Harrison Ford/Donald Trump.

So, the Iowa Caucuses begin Monday, and Donald Trump has returned to the Hawkeye State to campaign like crazy in the final stretch.

So, the Iowa Caucuses begin Monday, and Donald Trump has returned to the Hawkeye State to campaign like crazy in the final stretch.

Christopher Furlong / Getty Images

When the stakes are this high, every single detail is crucial and every bit of a rally is stage-managed.

When the stakes are this high, every single detail is crucial and every bit of a rally is stage-managed.

Scott Olson / Getty Images


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