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Marco Rubio Praises Military Service Of Muslim-Americans

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Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

SALEM, N.H. — A day after sharply criticizing President Obama's speech at a mosque, Republican presidential candidate Marco Rubio acknowledged the military service of patriotic Muslim Americans, and drew a distinction between them and the terrorist "animals" that threaten the country.

"Look, if you go to the national cemeteries in America, it's full of crosses and Stars of David, but you'll see some crescent moons, too," Rubio told voters here Thursday night.

On Wednesday, Rubio slammed Obama for visiting a mosque and "basically implying that America is discriminating against Muslims." He continued, "Of course there's discrimination in America of every kind. But the bigger issue is radical Islam," before dismissing Obama's speech at the mosque as "pitting people against each other."

At a campaign town hall Thursday night, a voter told Rubio he appreciated the candidate's "unifying" message, but said, "I'd just like you to include [Muslims] in your vision of representing all Americans. That's what makes you a great candidate." The voter did not specifically reference Rubio's remarks a day earlier, which many considered dismissive of anti-Muslim discrimination, but he suggested the candidate should be "speaking out against hate crimes."

"Who's in favor of hate crimes?" Rubio responded. "We're not talking about torturing anybody."

The candidate then praised the contributions made by Muslims in the United States.

"There are Americans, Muslim-Americans, who have died in the service of our country. There are Muslim-Americans now that serve in uniform all over the country on our behalf and for our safety," he said.

Rubio continued, "I'm talking about terrorists. I'm talking about killers. I'm talking about animals. People that become radicalized. And I don't care how you become radicalized. If there were radical Catholics or radical Presbyterians, we'd get fired up about that, as well."

At this, many in the crowd applauded, and shouts of "Yeah!" echoed through the elementary school gymnasium.

"But we can not ignore that there is a strain of Islam that has not just been radicalized and politicized, but it's become violent," Rubio said, adding that the country needed the help of the Muslim community to root out radicalized elements. "They'll be the first ones, possibly, to see this radicalization," he said.

He concluded his answer by saying it was important that all Americans have their religious liberties respected.


33 Times The Words "Progress" Or "Progressive" Were Said During The Democratic Debate

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Progress comes from the Latin word for hearing a word so many times you don’t know what it means any more and the letters start to look funny on the page.

They've debated it so much that the words "progress" and "progressive" were said 33 times in that political context.

They've debated it so much that the words "progress" and "progressive" were said 33 times in that political context.

Sesame Street

Hillary Clinton: 23

Hillary Clinton: 23

Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

"Well, let me start by saying that Sen. Sanders and I share some very big progressive goals."

"I want to build on the progress we've made."

"A progressive is someone who makes progress."

"Well because I am a progressive who gets things done. And the root of that word, progressive, is progress."

"But I've heard Sen. Sanders's comments, and it's really caused me to wonder who's left in the progressive wing of the Democratic Party. Under his definition, President Obama is not progressive because he took donations from Wall Street; Vice President Biden is not progressive because she supported Keystone; Senator Shaheen is not progressive because she supports the trade pact. Even the late, great Senator Paul Wellstone would not fit this definition because he voted for DOMA."

"But if we're going to get into labels, I don't think it was particularly progressive to vote against the Brady Bill five times."

"I don't think it was progressive to vote to give gun makers and sellers immunity. I don't think it was progressive to vote against Ted Kennedy's immigration reform."

"That's why I am laying out a specific agenda that will make more progress, get more jobs with rising incomes, get us to universal health care coverage, get us to universal pre-k, paid family leave and the other elements of what I think will build a strong economy, that will ensure Americans keep making progress."

"If I could, you know, in the very first debate I was asked am I a moderate or a progressive and I said I'm a progressive who likes to get things done."

"It is fair to say, senator, that in your definition, as you being the self-proclaimed gatekeeper for progressivism, I don't know anyone else who fits that definition, but I know a lot of really hard fighting progressives in the Democratic Party who have stood up time, and time again against special interests, against the powerful on behalf of those who are left behind and left out."

"Let's talk about what we would do as president, and Commander in Chief to make sure the progress continues into the future."

"Democrats, Republicans, independents, we're going to make progress together when I'm president."

"It is who the American people can believe can keep them safe, can get the economy moving again, can get incomes rising, can build on the progressive accomplishments of President Obama."


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Sanders Gets His Story Wrong On Controversial Ad Touting Newspaper Endorsement

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(The ad was called “Endorsement.”)

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During Thursday's debate, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders said that a campaign ad of his did not falsely claim newspaper endorsement he did not receive.

But, actually, that ad — posted to his YouTube page — did claim that he had received the endorsement.

In one instance, Sanders's ad — since corrected — claimed he was endorsed by the Valley News newspapers. But as noted by Politifact, that newspaper's editor said they did not endorse Sanders.

"As I understand it we did not suggest that we had the endorsement of the newspaper," Sanders said at the debate. "Newspapers who make endorsements also say positive things about other candidates and to the best of knowledge that is what we did. So we never said, that somebody a newspaper endorsed us that did not. What we did say is, blah, blah, blah, blah was said by the newspaper."

Sanders' ad also quoted an Nashua Telegraph editorial praising Sanders. Although the text in the ad did not say it was an endorsement, the editor of that paper called Sanders's ad deceptive.

"For the record, despite @BernieSanders deceptive ad to the contrary, @NashuaTelegraph has not endorsed any Dem prez candidate #nhpolitics," the editor of the Nashua Telegraph Roger Carroll tweeted.

The title of the ad was "Endorsed." Debate moderator Rachel Maddow cut Sanders off to say the title of the ad. The senator said it was just a title.

"But, that was, only, that was not to be on television, that's an important point," Sanders said on Thursday. "That was just something, as the secretary knows you but titles on ads and you send them out. But there was no word, in that ad, none, that said that those newspapers had endorsed us."

An advisor to Sanders, Tad Devine, told Time the text claiming the endorsement of the Valley News was a editing mistake.

"The earlier version of the ad was subjected to review and changed before it was broadcast," Devine said to Time. "That's a mistake on our part."

Here's the ad falsely claiming the endorsement of the Valley News:

Here's the ad falsely claiming the endorsement of the Valley News:

And here's the original ad which is, yes, all about endorsements:

youtube.com


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Clinton And Sanders Battle Over The Real Ideological Direction Of The Democratic Party

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Jewel Samad / AFP / Getty Images

DURHAM, N.H. — The great “who’s the true progressive” debate continued Thursday night ahead of the New Hampshire primary here as Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton argued over the definition of progressivism, talking semantics and tearing down one another as less than pure lefties.

This, in a surprising turn, wasn’t bad news for Clinton.

For the first time in an eight-month race, she was able to really puncture the attack from Sanders, a Democratic socialist, on the topic of liberal purity. Sanders and his supporters have used the Vermont senator’s ideological message and combative voting record in Congress to suggest he’s the candidate who can’t be bought or moved to the middle.

The conversation over progressive values and records, the one liberals have been looking for, came early in the Democratic debate here in Durham — the first one-on-one face-off between Clinton and Sanders. The candidates have agreed to three more debates following the primary here on Tuesday.

In recent weeks, Clinton has argued that she and Sanders share the same ideological goals. The difference, she says, is a matter of execution. “I’m not interested in ideas that sound good on paper,” but won’t make it in “the real world,” Clinton often tells voters at her events, most often referencing Sanders’s single-payer health care plan as a “pie-in-the-sky” idea.

“I am a progressive who gets things done,” Clinton told an audience of 600 voters at the University of New Hampshire at the start of the MSNBC debate. “And the root of that word, progressive, is progress.” (Clinton said the word “progressive” 15 times during the debate.)

As her campaign aides blasted out an email to reporters headlined, “Bernie’s Unachievable Revolution,” Clinton turned the question back on Sanders — and his record on guns. “If we're going to get into labels, I don't think it was particularly progressive to vote against the Brady Bill five times.”

“I've heard Sen. Sanders’s comments,” she said, “and it's really caused me to wonder who's left in the progressive wing of the Democratic Party. Under his definition, President Obama is not progressive because he took donations from Wall Street; Vice President Biden is not progressive because he supported Keystone; Sen. Shaheen is not progressive because she supports the trade pact. Even the late, great Sen. Paul Wellstone would not fit this definition because he voted for DOMA.”

Later, in her closing remarks, Clinton argued that there were other inequalities beyond income inequality that needed attention.

Sanders has made the case that donations from Wall Street, voting for the Iraq War, and belated support for same-sex marriage are not compatible with the mantle of “progressive.” And, in particular, he’s cited a line Clinton delivered in an Ohio speech last September. “I get accused of being kind of moderate and center,” she said then. “I plead guilty." (The line was in the middle of a point about how Clinton had the skill to work with right-leaning lawmakers to create compromises and, eventually, laws.)

The “moderate” line, referenced by Sanders directly on Thursday night, has been a tough one for her on the increasingly heated primary campaign trail. As polls tighten between the two candidates, Sanders has drawn large support with a message that practicality is just a Clinton codeword for abandoning liberal values. You can’t be both a moderate and a progressive, Sanders has said.

Clinton attempted to distance herself from the “moderate” line on Thursday, accusing her rival of taking the quote out of context.

“Cherry-picking a quote here or there doesn't change my record of having fought for racial justice, having fought for kids rights, having fought the kind of inequities that fueled my interest in service in the first place,” Clinton said.

This week in New Hampshire, the long-running debate over progressivism reached a fever pitch when a pointed Sanders quip about the “moderate” quote was shortened and repeated on cable news: “Some days, yes,” went that version of Sanders’s response to the question, Is Hillary Clinton a progressive? (He also added, “except when she announces that she’s a proud moderate. And then I guess she’s not a progressive,” but that was given less attention.)

Throughout the first half of the debate — perhaps the most heated of any yet on the Democratic side — Sanders was forced to spend his speaking time on the defensive over the question of what it means to be progressive.

“I think it's important that, look, I understand Sen. Sanders really trying to distinguish himself,” Clinton said. “I understand that, that's what you do in campaigns, but at the same time let's not be — in, I think, an unfair way — making an accusation, or making an attack about where I stand and about where I've always stood.”

Clinton turned to her right to address Sanders directly. “It is fair to say, senator, that in your definition, as you being the self-proclaimed gatekeeper for progressivism, I don't know anyone else who fits that definition, but I know a lot of really hard fighting progressives in the Democratic Party who have stood up time, and time again against special interests, against the powerful on behalf of those who are left behind and left out.”

The moderator offered Sanders time to respond, then suggested the candidates move to other topics.

“That’s right,” Sanders said. “I mean, instead of arguing about definitions, let’s talk about —”

Clinton interjected.

“Well, you began it yesterday with your comments!” she said, referencing his “some days” remark.

And then Sanders returned to something he did throughout the debate, to applause. “What we should do,” he said, “and one of the things we should do is not only talk the talk, but walk the walk. I am very proud to be the only candidate up here who does not have a Super PAC, who's not raising huge sums of money from Wall Street.” He hammered into the Wall Street issue again and again.

But was he setting the bar for what it means to be a progressive too high, or too Sanders-specific, a moderator asked?

“No, not at all,” Sanders said. “What we have got to do is wage a political revolution where millions of people have given up on the political process, stand up and fight back, demand the government that represents us and not just a handful of campaign contributors.”

Toward the end of the debate, when a moderator invited Sanders to criticize Clinton over her progressive failings — this time for supporting the death penalty — Sanders demurred.

Sanders, Clinton Dodge Question On Whether Immigration Is First White House Priority

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AP images

Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders finally talked about immigration on Thursday night, but would not commit to making the major issue — or any other — the first priority in their domestic agenda.

Saying that a president in their first year must make "choices" among many "heavy lifts," MSNBC moderator Chuck Todd asked whether either candidate would use limited political capital on the thorny issue that has gained bipartisan support in past years.

President Obama, he said, focused on health care arguably at the expense of immigration.

"Had he put immigration reform first, perhaps that gets done and healthcare doesn't," Todd said to Clinton. "So there are three big lifts that you've talked about: immigration, gun reform, climate change. What do you do first? Because you know the first one is the one you have the best shot at getting done."

"I don't accept that premise, Chuck," Clinton began, outlining her intention to promote an "ambitious, big, bold agenda" that includes improving health care, economic revitalization, early childhood education, and paid family leave as well as major change to the immigration system.

"I am absolutely supportive of comprehensive immigration reform and a path towards citizenship for 11 million people today who are living in the shadows," Sanders responded. "All right? We got to do that."

Sanders, too, would not commit to making immigration an early priority, returning instead to two of his key issues: campaign finance and the need for a political revolution that he argued will help blacks and Latinos by improving health care, criminal justice, and more. His litmus test for Supreme Court justices in his administration would be whether they would overturn Citizens United, he said.

For Sanders, the stance was a departure from comments he made in Las Vegas in November as he ramped up his Hispanic outreach when he said "passing a legislative solution to our broken immigration system will be a top priority" and pledging to enact executive actions on immigration that go farther than Obama has "in the first 100 days of my administration."

Obama's second immigration executive actions are stuck in court and have not been implemented, casting doubt on whether either candidate would be able to make good on their pledge to go beyond Obama.

Clinton's comments were consistent with what she told Telemundo in October when she resisted their push for her to commit to immigration as a priority in the first 100 days of her administration.

During the debate she returned to the issue, casting immigration as an issue where she would be able to explain to Americans why it matters.

To say to them, "here's why you may think comprehensive immigration reform with a path to citizenship isn't something you care about, but I'm telling you it will help fix the labor market, it will bring people out of the shadows, it will actually raise wages."

But activists hoping to hear a deep debate among Democrats on immigration were likely left disappointed — the conversation did not cover such ground as executive actions or a major tension between both campaigns, whether Sanders plans are realistic and Clinton's go far enough.

The issue came into focus Wednesday among DREAMer activists when Sanders staffer Erika Andiola criticized Clinton endorser Astrid Silva for saying Sanders's plans are not realistic. The back and forth led the main Twitter accounts for each candidate to get involved. Thursday night the immigration talk was short and sweet.

Trump Is Going To The Next Fox Debate Hosted By Megyn Kelly

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“I have no objection to being there.”

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Donald Trump won't run from the March Republican debate hosted by Megyn Kelly.

"No, I'll be there," Trump told the Steve Malzberg Show on Friday. "I have no objection to being there."

Trump also claimed — somewhat questionably — that his last absence from the Iowa debate hosted by Fox News had nothing to do with Kelly.

"That had nothing to do with Megyn Kelly, the fact that I went out of the last one," Trump stated. "It had to do with a memo that was sent out by Fox that was a little bit taunting and I said it was inappropriate. And what happened, is because I didn't do it, I raised $6 million for the vets. So I wouldn't have changed places. I mean, I did the right thing."

On Twitter and in interviews, Trump's campaign blasted Kelly and biased moderator who should be removed. In an radio interview, Trump's campaign manager Corey Lewandowski compared the Fox host anchor to DNC chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz, calling Kelly a "biased" moderator who leveled "unacceptable" personal attacks against Trump in the August Republican debate.

Trump then claimed on Twitter that his debate absence was a result more of a taunting Fox News PR memo. Trump went on to lose Iowa to Texas Sen. Ted Cruz.

Lawyer Who Represented Michael Brown, Trayvon Martin Families Will Endorse Clinton

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Mark Sagliocco / Getty Images

WASHINGTON — Benjamin Crump, the high-profile attorney who has represented the families of Trayvon Martin and Michael Brown, has endorsed Hillary Clinton, two sources told BuzzFeed News.

The Clinton campaign confirmed the news Friday.

"Crump will talk to South Carolina voters about what's at stake in this election and Hillary Clinton's strong record of fighting for families," a Clinton aide said. "He will highlight how Clinton is the only one who will stand up to the gun lobby, has a plan to reform our criminal justice system, and understands the issues that keep families up at night."

Crump introduced Clinton at the National Bar Association's event commemorating the 60th anniversary of the Montgomery Bus Boycott in Montgomery, Ala. in December. Clinton delivered an address which celebrated the achievements of the legal community in the protest.

“So even as we celebrate all that our country has achieved in the past 60 years, we must, in keeping with the legacy of those who have gone before, look to the future and the work that is left to do," Clinton said, highlighting the need for an overhaul of the criminal justice system. “We can’t go on like this. We’ve got to change."

Crump is among the civil rights leaders who will meet with Clinton on Feb. 16th in New York to discuss issues facing the black community, including voting rights, poverty, unemployment, mass incarceration, the campaign said Friday.

Other attendees include Melanie Campbell of the National Coalition on Black Civic Participation; Marc Morial of the National Urban League, Rev. Al Sharpton; Kristen Clarke of the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law; and Wade Henderson, the outgoing president and CEO of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights.

"Clinton has laid out key proposals to reform our criminal justice system, restore voting rights and strengthen the economy so that African American families can get ahead and stay ahead," a Clinton aide said.

Clinton has also secured the endorsements of mothers of black men who lost their lives due to police violence. Gwen Carr, the mother of Eric Garner, and Sybrina Fulton, the mother of Trayvon Martin, have both endorsed her.

Said Clinton in December: “I’ve met with too many mothers who have lost their children – lost to senseless, incomprehensible violence. My heart breaks for them. Many of these women are doing something quite remarkable: they are turning their grief into a powerful call to action for our nation."

Donald Trump Says He Doesn't Care About Suing Ted Cruz Anymore

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“I’m so into New Hampshire now, Jeff.”

Andrew Burton / Getty Images

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Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump said in a radio interview on Friday that he is "so into New Hampshire" that he no longer cares about suing his opponent, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz — something he said he would probably do on Wednesday.

"Well, you know, I'm in New Hampshire now, and I'm not even thinking about it," Trump told Boston radio host Jeff Kuhner,

Trump said on Wednesday that he would likely pursue legal action against Cruz for spreading a rumor during the Iowa caucuses that GOP candidate Ben Carson was dropping out of the race.

"I probably will," Trump said when he was first asked if he'd sue Cruz. "What he did is unthinkable. He said the man has left the race and he said it during the caucus. And then when the clarification was put out by Ben Carson saying it's untrue, they got the statement and they didn't put it out."

(Carson later said he was simply returning home to Florida to get a change of clothes, and Cruz personally apologized to Dr. Carson for not forwarding the Carson campaign's statement to his own supporters.)

In Friday's interview, Trump said, "I like Ben Carson very much, and I like a lot of people, and a lot of people sort of don't know what exactly happened with regard to the voting, but I don't care about it anymore. I'm so into New Hampshire now, Jeff."

Trump, who has faced questions from conservatives about how his position on abortion has changed over the years, also took a position on overturning Roe v. Wade, a question he has previously said he would look at "very, very carefully."

Asked if he would appoint Supreme Court justices who would overturn Roe v. Wade, Trump said, "Yes, and I think it's a possibility to do. It'll take you time because you need quite a few but at some point I think it's possibility. Right now, it looks like it's not, but over a period of time and with the right choices, you could do that."

Later in the interview, Trump rejected the criticism that he lacks the foreign policy experience to be president.

"I'm most experienced at foreign policy because I know what I'm doing," he argued, adding that he is the only remaining Republican candidate who opposed the Iraq War.


Ben Carson Compares Cruz’s Reaction To Iowa Controversy To Clinton’s Benghazi Response

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“I’m not saying that it rises to the level up Benghazi, I’m saying it’s the same kind of attitude.”

Mark Wilson / Getty Images

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Ben Carson questioned the Christian morality of Ted Cruz's presidential campaign for their actions the night of the Iowa caucuses, adding that Cruz's response to his campaign's actions was akin to Hillary Clinton's reaction to the Benghazi attacks.

Asked by Todd Starnes if he was "satisfied with the way Sen. Cruz has handled himself as Christian" over the incident in Iowa, Carson said, "Well, let me put it this way, it's not the way that I would have handled it."

"I would have said if I didn't agree with what's being — which he did say that — I would make sure that it didn't happen again," Carson continued. "And I would take corrective action. Not to take corrective action is tacitly saying it's okay, or it's sort of like, as Hillary Clinton said after Benghazi, 'what difference does it make.'"

"I'm not saying that it rises to the level up Benghazi, I'm saying it's the same kind of attitude," he said, when pressed by Starnes if the controversy rose to the level of Benghazi. "The attitude being, it's water under the bridge, it's gone by, let's not deal with it."

On caucus night, the Cruz campaign spread a CNN report saying Ben Carson would not travel to New Hampshire and South Carolina after the Iowa caucuses, suggesting Carson was getting out of the race. Cruz apologized to Carson on Tuesday for his campaign failure to send out out updates to its supporters that Carson was merely doing laundry at his home in Florida, and not dropping out.

On Thursday, Breitbart News reported the Cruz campaign sent out messages saying Carson was leaving the campaign trail on caucus night.

"Well, certainly there were some major irregularities there that are not the kind of things that I would ever engage in against a fellow candidate," Carson said earlier in the interview. "Did they cross the line in terms of the law? I don't think so, but I do think there comes a time when you do what's right rather than what's legal. And I don't think that it was the right thing to do."

Santorum Took An Online Quiz And Aligned More With Rubio Than Himself

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97% Rick Santorum. 98% Marco Rubio.

This week, after a poor showing at the Iowa caucuses, Sen. Rick Santorum dropped his presidential bid and endorsed Florida Sen. Marco Rubio.

This week, after a poor showing at the Iowa caucuses, Sen. Rick Santorum dropped his presidential bid and endorsed Florida Sen. Marco Rubio.

Brendan Hoffman / Getty Images

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Santorum took the quiz on the website "ISideWith.Com" Santorum revealed he scored 97% Santorum, but here's the catch....

Santorum took the quiz on the website "ISideWith.Com" Santorum revealed he scored 97% Santorum, but here's the catch....

Via isidewith.com


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Sanders Aide Says Bernie’s Cracked The Code On Latino Support

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John Locher / AP

DURHAM, New Hampshire — Winning here is all fine and good for Bernie Sanders.

But if supporters of his political revolution want to prove they’re a threat to Hillary Clinton in the long term, they’ll have to show they can play in the next two states, Nevada and South Carolina, and they'll have to do it quickly.

Those states — and their significantly more diverse populations — have posed a problem for Sanders, whose aides cite an extremely low Sanders name ID as the reason.

It's a problem that the campaign's top Latino outreach official said Thursday that the campaign has cracked the code on — and Iowa proves it.

Erika Andiola, a DREAMer and immigration activist, joined Sanders’s campaign in October as a member of his Latino outreach staff. She told BuzzFeed News in an interview following Thursday’s debate at the University of New Hampshire that the results from Iowa show Sanders is going to do better with Latinos in Nevada than the conventional wisdom suggests.

“When you look at the 20 [counties] that have the most Latinos in Iowa, 20 of those [counties], 15 were won by Bernie. The fact is, we worked very hard to make sure that we did outreach to those communities,” she said.

Andiola is citing the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) in Iowa, which after a successful $300,000 effort to get 10,000 Hispanics to caucus, told BuzzFeed News on Tuesday that Sanders had done well in the biggest Latino population centers in the state by focusing on young Latinos drawn to the Vermont senator's message in much the same way young white liberals have been.

Christian Ucles, the group's political director said he is still waiting for more detailed data, but outlined the broad strokes from Iowa that played a role in keeping the results close, suggesting an avenue for future success in larger and more diverse states.

"These counties are very small so just having 100 Latinos participate can have a big time impact," he said.

The Sanders campaign, he said, leaned on the star power of Andiola and fellow DREAMer turned staffer Cesar Vargas to energize young Hispanics with their message focused on immigration.

Campaign officials are also buoyed by the demographics of the Latino vote in Iowa, where 47% are millennial voters, in line with the national figure release last month by Pew that showed 44% of Hispanics fall in the 18-35 age group.

Sanders, Ucles said, did well in small college towns that also have a meatpacking plant like Black Hawk county or Muscatine county, which is 17% Hispanic. These are places where the parents may not be U.S. citizens but their kids are.

The profile for Clinton's Latino supporters were people who had participated in past caucuses, older than 40, and most likely union members, he said, in places like Polk County and Wapello County.

But assuming that perceived success with the small Hispanic population in Iowa (exit polls show Clinton still won 58% of support from minority voters) will easily translate to Nevada would be a mistake. In January, Pew found that Iowa had 67,000 eligible Latino voters, or 2.9% of the electorate. Nevada has 328,000 — 17.2% of possible voters. It's a significantly more populous and geographically larger state, where size of organization may make a difference.

The Clinton campaign sees the contours of both states and the strategy needed to win as completely different. It began with a major organizational advantage. They planted their flag there in April of last year, hiring veteran Obama operatives Emmy Ruiz and Jorge Neri to run the state that they helped the president win with 70% of the Latino vote in 2012.

The Sanders campaign has been playing catch up in Nevada and hopes its energy from young voters will close the head start Clinton began the race with. Much of that ramp up for Sanders came in the fall, after Ruiz and Neri had done a summer bus tour around Nevada speaking to residents. In September, Sanders hired his first state director, who opened the campaign's first office in the state in October before leaving for personal reasons. The director was replaced by the respected Joan Kato.

But Andiola said the Sanders campaign out-hustled Clinton’s when it came to the Iowa Latino vote, where Clinton focused on turning out likely caucus-goers, a lesson she said will apply to Nevada.

“We knew that Hillary Clinton was looking just in Nevada, they were doing absolutely no outreach in Iowa, we know because we were going to every single event. We had our staff making sure that we were talking to the Latino community, even it was a small percentage [of the population,]” Andiola said.

Ucles said that strategy was engaging many young DREAMers but also young Hispanic business professionals in their early 30s.

“And guess what? that paid off," Andiola said. "Fifteen out of the 20 precincts actually went to Bernie. For us, that's exactly what we need to do: work on the ground, talking to people.”

George W. Bush Once Leaked A Nude Photo Of Jeb To The White House Press Corps

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Bush 43 will campaign for his little brother in South Carolina.

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During his 2001 White House Correspondents Dinner speech, President George W. Bush addressed his relationship with his younger brother, Jeb, following the contentious Florida recount.

Insisting there were no hard feelings between him and Jeb, Bush pointed to what he said was a picture of his brother. The photo, projected onto a screen, showed a naked Jeb Bush as a toddler.

"Fortunately, I've got great brothers and a great sister. Some people have asked me, however, if the vote recount left any hard feelings between my brother Jeb and me. Not a bit. In fact, here's a picture of the Governor of Florida," Bush said.

On Thursday Politico reported that George Bush will be appearing in a TV ad for Right to Rise, the super PAC that is supporting Jeb. The 43rd president will also campaign for Jeb in South Carolina.

When asked about the joke, Tim Miller, Bush's campaign communications director, said, "The Bush's have a healthy respect for pranks, Jeb included." Miller could not confirm if the photo shown was, in fact, of Jeb Bush.

Election 2016 Update: Is Everyone In New Hampshire Losing Their Mind?

Carly Fiorina Claims Some Of Her Rivals Lobbied To Keep Her Out Of The Debate

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Fiorina’s campaign would not specify which candidates she was referring to when she made the comments.

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Carly Fiorina accused rival campaigns on Friday morning of lobbying to keep her out of Saturday's Republican presidential debate, but her campaign declined to specify to BuzzFeed News which campaigns Fiorina was referring to when she made the comments.

"It's interesting. I said that Ted Cruz stepped to the plate and Ben Carson stepped to the plate," Fiorina said on Boston Herald Radio's Morning Meeting. "Honestly, where are Marco Rubio, and Jeb Bush, and John Kasich, and Chris Christie? Some of them lobbied actively not to have me on that stage. You know what that tells me? They're afraid to debate me. So, I don't know how they could possibly tell the voters of New Hampshire that they're prepared to beat Hillary Clinton."

Herald Radio's host interjected to confirm that indeed some of Fiorina's Republican rivals lobbied against her inclusion in the debate. Fiorina said her competitors lobbied ABC and the RNC to keep her off the stage.

A Fiorina spokeswoman, Sarah Isgur Flores, declined to say which candidates lobbied against Fiorina's inclusion when asked by BuzzFeed News over email.

"You should ask the other campaigns," she said. "We know where Trump, Carson, and Cruz stand. How about the two guys she beat in Iowa?"

Asked again who it was, Fiorina's campaign said to contact other campaigns.

"I don't discuss private calls with reporters," she said. "Which is why I'm telling you to call other people."

New Hampshire Voters Grill John Kasich On Ohio Lead Water Case

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Matthew Cavanaugh / Getty Images

BEDFORD, New Hampshire — At his 100th townhall in the Granite State, Gov. John Kasich celebrated with cake and confetti. He also faced some heat from voters over a crisis back home in Ohio.

The Department of Justice is investigating why authorities in Ohio waited months before notifying residents of Sebring — a village in the northeastern part of the state — about elevated levels of lead in their water. Kasich has previously defended his response to the crisis when asked by reporters on the campaign trail, denying that the situation in Sebring is similar to that in Flint, Michigan, where the lead level found in water was much higher.

But on Friday evening — just days before New Hampshire’s presidential primary — Kasich got back-to-back questions about the crisis from crowd.

“I was wondering if you’d had the chance to personally apologize to those families?” one of the attendees asked.

Kasich, who spent several minutes answering the previous questions on social security and college affordability, gave a quick response.

"First of all, our top administration in the EPA went immediately to the village,” he said. "We have warned the village to tell everybody that there was a risk. We have sent tests out. We’ve had controllers in there working to make sure the chemicals are right, because the water coming in, sir, is clean. At the same time that we’ve done that, we took the operator and got rid of him. And the federal EPA came in and said Ohio did more than what was even required of them."

“The water coming in is clean. And we’re working to make sure the water is safe.”

The man who asked the question continued to press Kasich — “But have you apologized to the families?”

Kasich moved on to the next question, but he couldn’t escape the topic.

A woman seated a few seats away asked: “It concerns me when you put the 800-pound donkey on stage — Hillary. So my question to you is: I watched the debate last night; I watched Hillary address Flint and Hillary wasn’t remotely nice about what went on Flint.”

She continued: "And I understand… Sebring is a lot smaller than Flint. But she will I’m sure bring it up. It’s the Clinton machine... She will look at you and say, ‘You hired [Director of the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency Craig] Butler. He even got on television and said he was a little slow in responding to the situation there.’ How will you stand up to Hillary in a debate?”

Kasich once again defended his administration's response, but then quickly pivoted to highlighting his electability and his "positive campaign."

"Our guys acted immediately, and that’s the way we handle all of our crises — whether it’s a weather crisis where the temperature gets above 100 degrees and our seniors are stuck without power, whether it is a potential ebola crisis, whether it was a problem we had in Toledo with water,” he said. "We handled them immediately. And we don’t ignore anything. We get on top of it, and we work together as a team."

"In regard to Hillary or anybody else, look the situation is that case is this: With my history, especially in running for re-election as governor, there’s a county called Cuyahoga County which is were Cleveland is. Barack Obama won Cuyahoga County by 40 points. I won Cuyahoga County, ok? I received 60% of the women vote, 26 percent of the African-American vote and 51% of union households. You see I’m running the most positive campaign that people have seen here."

Kasich then went on to tell a story about how he had once complained to his friend former California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger about political opponents spending millions against him.

"He looked at me and said 'John, love the beatings,'” he told the crowd, imitating Schwarzenegger’s accent,

"What I will tell you is part of the campaign is not just about how you trash somebody else. The way you win a campaign is with what you’re for. Your heart and your brain. That’s what it’s really about."


Ben Carson Really Wants You To Know He's Not Quitting

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Mark Wilson / Getty Images

MANCHESTER, New Hampshire — Ben Carson and his family fired up campaign staff and volunteers Saturday morning by repeatedly stressing that the neurosurgeon had no intention of dropping out of the GOP presidential primary anytime soon.

“I am in this. I’m not leaving,” Carson said forcefully — a change from his usual soft-spoken tone — to about 100 of his supporters at his campaign’s state headquarters. “I’m not going anywhere.”

Referring to his plans to go home after Iowa to get a change of new clothes, which fueled rumors about him dropping out, Carson added with a laugh: “Maybe I should never go home for another change of clothes.”

Presumably in a freshly laundered suit, Carson, and his family repeatedly mentioned the “deceptive tactics” used by Sen. Ted Cruz’s campaign in Iowa. Cruz’s campaign sent out and left voicemails about an initial CNN report about the rumors on the evening of the Iowa caucuses, but not a follow-up story clarifying that Carson was not suspending his campaign. Cruz has since apologized to Carson.

“Do not let anybody — I don’t care who it is — tell you that I’m going anywhere.” Carson said to loud cheers and "amens" from the crowd. "They have written my obituary every week for the last year and half, and then they turn around and say, ‘He’s still here?’”

Carson’s wife, Candy Carson, arrived at the campaign office an hour before her husband. As she mingled with staff and volunteers, shaking hands and taking pictures with them, she also brought up her experience in Iowa of going to two precincts and hearing from caucus-goers the rumor that Carson was dropping out.

“It’s not fair to us, but it’s not fair to Iowans,” she said to a small group as she made her way through the crowd.

Carson’s son, Murray Carson, who made his first trip to the Granite State to campaign with his father, also addressed the Iowa rumor. “I kept hoping and still hope that Cruz himself isn’t behind it,” he told a group of reporters. “I thought it was unfortunate that some people were deceived by that. But that’s politics I guess.”

Just days before the primary, talk of the rumor appears to be energizing Carson's supporters in New Hampshire, where he is polling at about 3%, according to RealClear Politics' average of polls.

In interviews, Carson supporters told BuzzFeed News they were outraged when they heard about what happened in Iowa. “It makes me sick,” said Judy Patte, 73, who was one of the first ones to show up at the event Saturday morning.

“I hope the Cruz votes go to Carson.”

David Bentley, a retired property manager who was phone banking on behalf of Carson, said he wants a stronger apology from Cruz.

“I thought his response was tepid,” said Bentley, a former Romney backer. "When you’re at the top of your heap… the one thing you cannot delegate is responsibility. That would be called shirking."

"A Special Place In Hell For Women Who Don't Help Each Other," Albright Tells Clinton Rally

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Taylor Swift’s favorite quip makes a comeback.

Hillary Clinton was joined by New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker and former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright at a rally in Concord, New Hampshire, on Saturday.

Hillary Clinton was joined by New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker and former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright at a rally in Concord, New Hampshire, on Saturday.

After a pitch aimed at encouraging young women to support Clinton become the first female president, Albright told the crowd, "Just remember: there's a special place in hell for women who don't help each other."

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The line was met with hearty applause from Clinton and Booker, as well as wild cheers from the crowd.

The line was met with hearty applause from Clinton and Booker, as well as wild cheers from the crowd.


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Marco Rubio Used To Say Barack Obama "Doesn't Know What He Is Doing" A Lot

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In Saturday’s debate, Rubio “dispelled the notion” that Obama doesn’t know what he’s doing. Rubio used to say that Obama doesn’t know what he’s doing.

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Rubio was asked if he was too inexperienced — and attacked by others with the comparison that Obama was a one-term senator.

"Let's dispel once and for all with this fiction that Barack Obama doesn't know what he's doing," said Rubio. "He knows exactly what he's doing. Barack Obama is undertaking a systematic effort to change this country, to make America more like the rest of the world. That's why he passed Obamacare and the stimulus and Dodd-Frank and the deal with Iran, it is a systematic effort to change America."

And again:

"Let's dispel with this fiction that Barack Obama doesn't know what he's doing. He knows exactly what he's doing. He is trying to change this country. He wants America to become more like the rest of the world. We don't want to be like the rest of the world," Rubio said.

And again:

"We are not facing a president who doesn't know what's doing. He knows what he is doing. That's why he's done the things he's done."

"This is a choice between a guy that has no idea what he's doing, and a guy that does," Rubio said of Obama during the 2012 election, contrasting him with Obama.

On his Facebook, Rubio shared the same sentiment looking to a video of the comments at the time saying, "This isn't a choice between two bad guys or one bad guy and one good guy, this is a choice between a guy that has no idea what he's doing, and a guy that does."

"The vice president says we're going to follow them to the gates of hell but the president is saying that we're going to simply contain them," said Rubio told CBS in 2014. "I mean, these — our allies are watching this as well, and they're concluding that the American foreign policy is in the hands of someone who does not know what he's doing."

In December of 2015, on Fox News, Rubio criticized a speech by Obama on the threat of ISIS by saying, "People first of all are scared because they sense the threat, it continues to grow, and the president doesn't know what he's doing. On Sunday night, he gave a speech that was supposed to reassure the American people and I think it made things worse. He gave a speech where he basically announced that, these are the problems that we have, but we're not gonna change anything."

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Under Attack, Marco Rubio Malfunctions — And Repeats The Same Line Four Times

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Joe Raedle / Getty Images

MANCHESTER, N.H. — In a high-profile stumble three days out from the New Hampshire primary, a rattled-looking Marco Rubio retreated from an aggressive grilling during Saturday's debate in a strange way: by reciting the same line at least four times.

Rubio, who entered the debate with momentum following a strong third-place showing in Iowa, was asked by a moderator to identify the accomplishments in his record that have prepared him for the presidency.

After listing his work on issues like eminent domain and dysfunction at the Veterans Affairs department, Rubio concluded his answer by returning to one of the prominent themes of his campaign message.

"Let's dispel once and for all with this fiction that Barack Obama doesn't know what he's doing," the candidate said. "He knows exactly what he's doing. Barack Obama is undertaking a systematic effort to change this country, to make America more like the rest of the world. ... When I'm president of the United States, we are going to re-embrace all the things that made America the greatest nation in the world, and we are going to leave our children with what they deserve, the single greatest nation in the history of the world."

Lines like this one — a sharp indictment of the Democratic incumbent combined with an unabashed expression of American exceptionalism — have earned Rubio a reputation as a gifted orator. Ever since he first launched his long-shot bid for the Senate in Florida, he has been making conservative audiences swoon with his optimistic speeches and inspiring life story.

But on the debate stage Saturday night, Rubio's years-long reliance on soaring rhetoric abruptly turned against him.

It began when Chris Christie, who has spent recent days fighting to blunt Rubio's momentum in the polls by casting him as inexperienced, turned to face his opponent.

"You have not been involved in a consequential decision where you had to be held accountable," Christie said to Rubio. "You just simply haven't."

Rubio replied by saying New Jersey's credit rating had been downgraded nine times during Christie's governorship. And then, jarringly, Rubio slipped back into the same rhetoric, verbatim, he had used just minutes earlier.

"But I would add this," he said. "Let's dispel with this fiction that Barack Obama doesn't know what he's doing. He knows exactly what he's doing. He is trying to change this country. He wants America to become more like the rest of the world..."

Reclaiming the floor as soon as Rubio concluded, Christie looked straight into the camera.

"You see, everybody, I want the people at home to think about this," he told the debate viewers. "This is what Washington, D.C., does. The drive-by shot at the beginning with incorrect and incomplete information, and then the memorized 25-second speech that is exactly what his advisers gave him. See, Marco, the thing is this: When you're president of the United States, when you are a governor of a state, the memorized 30-second speech where you talk about how great America is doesn't solve one problem for one person. They expect you to plow the snow. They expect you to get the schools open. And when the worst natural disaster in your state's history hits you, they expect you to rebuild their state, which is what I've done. None of that stuff happens on the floor of the United State Senate."

Rubio replied by arguing that when a blizzard descended on New Jersey last month, "you didn't even want to go back." But the jab was met with boos from the audience.

Rubio, by now visibly flustered and frustrated, returned once again to the same line, as though trying to find his rhetorical footing.

"Here's the bottom line. This notion that Barack Obama doesn't know what he's doing is just not—"

"There it is!" Christie interjected. "There it is. The memorized 25-second speech. There it is, everybody."

"That's the reason why this campaign is so important," Rubio protested. "Because I think this notion — I think this is an important point. We have to understand what we're going through here. We are not facing a president that doesn't know what he's doing. He knows what he is doing."

By the time the exchange concluded, Rubio had been reduced to repeating over and over again that Christie "didn't want to go back" to his home state for the snowstorm — a petty dispute that made the typically above-the-fray Rubio look uncharacteristically peevish.

Finally, Christie joked, "Oh, so — wait a second. One of the skills you get as United States senator is ESP also?"

Yet, Rubio returned once more to the same point later in the debate.

"I think anyone who believes that Barack Obama isn't doing what he's doing on purpose doesn't understand what we're dealing with here, OK?" Rubio said, interjecting after Christie referenced his work on the Gang of Eight immigration bill. "This is a president — this is a president who is trying to change this country. When he talked about change, he wasn't talking about dealing with our problems."

In the post-debate spin room, rival campaigns rushed to pronounce brutal judgements of Rubio's shaky performance.

"If he performs like that against Hillary Clinton, we will get crushed," said senior Christie adviser Mike Duhaime, adding, "Now, he's got a long time to practice. But he practiced for tonight's debate and he did terrible."

Surrogates for both Christie and Jeb Bush, speaking on condition of anonymity, suggested Saturday night they had already heard from Rubio donors now signaling an openness to shift their allegiances just days before the primary.

Rubio's campaign, meanwhile, did their best to spin their candidate's performance as proof that he was focusing his firepower on Obama's record, while his opponents just wanted to attack a fellow Republican.

"The other candidates made one thing clear: They were going to try and take out Marco tonight. They failed," wrote Rubio campaign manager Terry Sullivan in a fundraising email after the debate.

But inside the spin room, the media narrative was already taking hold. As a media scrum surrounded Donald Trump, someone in the back called out, "Mr. Trump! Is this the end of the Rubio campaign?"

An Uncertain Path Ahead For Juvenile Sentencing Cases Still Before The Supreme Court

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Mark Wilson / Getty Images

WASHINGTON — Cortez Davis is serving life in prison under Michigan’s felony murder statute for a killing that occurred when he was 16 years old. Davis was not the gunman, the trial judge in his case found, but was a participant in a robbery when the fatal shooting took place.

Nonetheless, under the Michigan law, because he was a key participant in the underlying felony, he was charged with felony murder. Davis was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole — the mandatory sentence in the mid-1990s.

More than a year ago, lawyers for Davis asked the Supreme Court to take up their client’s challenge to a lower court decision that upheld that sentence.

Now, following a recent Supreme Court decision, his challenge and several others are likely to be sent back to lower courts — a move that could, depending on what state courts do next, put off even further the chance people like Davis have to reduce or end sentences the court has repeatedly thrown into question in recent years.

The petitions ask the justices to address how and under what circumstances states can sentence juveniles to life without parole, including in a handful of cases in which the convictions are for felony murder.

Over the past decade, the court has taken up several cases addressing juvenile justice issues. The court ended the eligibility of juveniles for the death penalty in 2005, and has since, in a series of rulings, narrowed the eligibility of juveniles for life sentences.

Last week, the court handed down yet another significant ruling on juvenile sentencing — this one in the case of Henry Montgomery — that deals with complicated legal issues, but has major consequences.

The court, in an opinion by Justice Anthony Kennedy, held that the 2012 ban on sentences of mandatory juvenile life in prison without the possibility of parole applied not just going forward, but also to those sentenced in the past like Montgomery. Montgomery is in jail for a killing he committed at 17 in 1963.

The ruling from the high court resolves a dispute among lower courts: Some had decided that a 2012 ruling from the high court was a procedural ruling that only applied to new sentences. The Supreme Court now says that isn’t the case.

“In light of what this Court has said in [past cases] about how children are constitutionally different from adults in their level of culpability … prisoners like Montgomery must be given the opportunity to show their crime did not reflect irreparable corruption; and, if it did not, their hope for some years of life outside prison walls must be restored,” Kennedy wrote in the Jan. 25 decision in Montgomery v. Louisiana.

Far from a narrow procedural ruling, Kennedy explained that the 2012 ruling — Miller v. Alabama — was a substantive one, and, in its wake, “it will be the rare juvenile offender who can receive that same sentence.”

While Montgomery’s case was pending, however, the court left several related cases like Davis’s one — all of which ask the court to go further down this path — waiting for action from the justices.

"[P]risoners like Montgomery must be given the opportunity to show their crime did not reflect irreparable corruption."

Most expect the justices now to send those cases back to lower courts to consider how the Montgomery decision affects their respective cases. During that period, how state courts interpret the Supreme Court’s ruling could vary widely. How rare is the “rare juvenile” that Kennedy writes about whose crime reflects “irreparable corruption”? How do states make that determination?

The court sending back Davis’s case would mean a further series of court hearings and rulings — all of which could lead to his eligibility for parole, but, if past experience is any guide, it just as likely will lead him back to seeking review, yet again, from the Supreme Court.

For Davis, this has been going on since 1994. The life without parole sentence that he is serving — and has served now for more than 20 years — was imposed by an appeals court over the objections of the trial court judge, who initially sentenced him to 10 to 40 years.

After the Miller Supreme Court ruling, the trial judge found that the ruling should apply to past offenders like Davis and that he was, as such, entitled to re-sentencing. “We, the People of the State of Michigan have treated this juvenile, now man, inhumanely,” the judge wrote.

A little more than a month later, though, that decision was reversed by the appeals court — a decision later upheld by the Michigan Supreme Court.

In January 2015, Davis asked the Supreme Court to review his case. In addition to asking the justices to review whether the ruling barring mandatory life without parole sentence applied to past offenders like him, Davis’s lawyers — led by the Equal Justice Initiative’s Bryan Stevenson — also asked the court to decide whether life without parole sentences, mandatory or otherwise, should be held to be unconstitutional for people like Davis who were juveniles at the time of their crime and who the trial court concluded neither killed anyone nor intended to do so. (An earlier Supreme Court ruling in 2010, in Graham v. Florida, barred life without parole for non-homicide offenses committed by juveniles. This second question in Davis’s case, effectively, asks the court to rule that felony murder is included in that bar.)

After initially being scheduled to be reviewed by the justices at their private conference in early March 2015, Davis’s case was rescheduled to be considered in April.

In the meantime, though, the court agreed to hear Montgomery’s case out of Louisiana. Montgomery similarly was sentenced to life without parole under a statute that made the punishment mandatory. Montgomery, however, was convicted for the murder of a police officer that he himself had committed more than 50 years ago. The only question in Montgomery’s case, therefore, was whether the court’s earlier decision ending mandatory life without parole for juveniles should apply to past offenders.

Although the court docket in Davis’s case shows that the court was to consider his petition for review in April and again in May of this past year, the justices are yet to act on it. In the meantime, Davis has continued serving his sentence.

On Jan. 25, Kennedy detailed the court’s decision that Louisiana had to give retroactive effect to the Supreme Court’s 2012 decision in the Miller. In the wake of that decision, it’s likely that the justices will send Davis’s case back to the Michigan Supreme Court to reconsider it. As Kennedy suggested in the Montgomery decision, Michigan either could re-sentence Davis — considering whether his crime reflects “permanent incorrigibility” — or make him eligible for parole consideration.

If Davis is re-sentenced instead of being granted a chance at parole, however, and if he is sentenced to life again, then he likely would go back to the U.S. Supreme Court — asking the court, again, to hear his case on the felony murder question. (As is already being seen in Montgomery’s case, state officials in Louisiana have told the state's supreme court that their aim is to re-sentence those with mandatory life without parole sentences, rather than give them the possibility of parole.)

At that point, even if the justices did take up his case, Davis likely would have served another two, three, or more years serving a sentence that could be held to have been unconstitutional based on Supreme Court rulings from 2010, 2012, and 2016 — and would only get the constitutional relief he has been seeking whenever his hypothetical case is decided.

Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Anthony Kennedy, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer, and Sonia Sotomayor listen to President Barack Obama deliver the State of the Union speech on January 12, 2016 in Washington, DC.

Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

Davis is by no means alone. Several similar cert petitions addressing juvenile life sentences have been pending for some time.

Donte Lamar Jones was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole in Virginia for shooting a woman, who later died, during a robbery in 2000 when he was 17. In April 2015, he asked the justices to review his case. In addition to asking them to resolve whether Miller is retroactive, his lawyers, led by Duke McCall III of Morgan Lewis & Bockius, also asked the court to resolve whether Miller even applies to sentences like those given to Jones. The Virginia Supreme Court ruled that it does not, because judges in Virginia can suspend a statutorily required sentence like that given to Jones. As such, they reasoned, it is not actually mandatory.

Lawrence Jacobs was sentenced to two consecutive life sentences without the possibility of parole for felony murder, called second degree felony murder in Louisiana, in a burglary committed at 16 in which his co-conspirator killed the two people at the house they were robbing in 1996. In June 2015, he asked the justices to review his case. Like Davis, Lawrence has asked the court to review whether a juvenile can be sentenced to life without parole when he neither killed nor intended to kill anyone. Additionally, though, his lawyers, led by Ben Cohen of the Promise of Justice Initiative, have posed a more broad question: whether any life sentence without the possibility of parole for juveniles is unconstitutional.

Robert Cameron Houston committed a homicide at 17 and was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole in Utah. In November 2015, he asked the Supreme Court to review his case, taking up the broad question of whether life without the possibility of parole should be held to be unconstitutional for juveniles. His lawyers, led by University of Utah law professor Michael Teter, also asked the court to take up his case to answer whether the requirement in Miller that “sentencers consider an offender’s youth and attendant characteristics” before finding that a life sentence without parole is appropriate is the type of decision that other Supreme Court cases have said must be made by a jury.

The court could, and most court watchers think likely will, send all four cases back to the respective state courts for further consideration in light of the decision in Montgomery — a move that would put off any decision on the related issues.

"Th[e] question will need to be resolved by this Court, as states continue to sentence juveniles convicted of felony murder to life without parole."

However, while the justices could send back those specific cases, the issues themselves will keep making their way to the Supreme Court.

On Tuesday, eight days after the Montgomery decision was handed down, the law professor who submitted the petition in Houston’s case submitted a new cert petition — in a different case of a juvenile sentenced to life without parole.

“Albert Bell has spent the last 23 years incarcerated for his role in a robbery that ended in two deaths because of another's acts,” Teter told the justices of the crime Bell committed at 16.

Despite the 2010 decision ending juvenile life without the possibility of parole for non-homicide offenses and despite the 2012 decision ending mandatory juvenile life without the possibility of parole for homicide offenses, Teter explained, the court has not resolved where felony murder falls.

Unlike in several of the earlier filed petitions, the case does not raise the questions about Miller retroactivity, so sending Bell’s case back to be reconsidered in light of Montgomery would not appear to be an option for the justices. They either need to accept the case (or one of the earlier filed ones) or deny it, a move that would leave in place the Arkansas Supreme Court ruling upholding Bell's life without parole sentence for felony murder.

“That question will need to be resolved by this Court, as states continue to sentence juveniles convicted of felony murder to life without parole,” Teter stated.

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