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America Ferrera Said She Wants To Netflix And Chill With Hillary Clinton

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Hours before the Nevada caucuses began, America Ferrera addressed a rally of Hillary Clinton supporters on Friday night in Las Vegas, telling them just how much she supported the Democratic candidate.

John Locher / AP

"I'd just like to Netflix and chill with Hillary," Ferrera told audiences, according to ABC News. "I have a strong feeling we'd be BFFs if you just gave me a chance."

Josh Edelson / AFP / Getty Images

But some wondered if the Ugly Betty star really knew what she was describing.

ABC / Via Facebook: UglyBetty

Via twitter.com

That's okay, America. We'd Netflix and Chill with you anytime.

Justin Sullivan / Getty Images


A Guide To Donald Trump’s Shifting Position On The Iraq War

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Trump expressed tepid support for the war in 2002, made both positive and negative comments about it in 2003, and was strongly opposed by 2004.

Spencer Platt / Getty Images

For much of the 2016 presidential campaign, Donald Trump has touted his early opposition to the Iraq War as evidence of his foreign policy judgment.

"I think it is important because it is about judgment. I didn't want to go into Iraq, it is about judgment. Because what I said, you're going to destabilize the Middle East and that's what happened," Trump said in a September debate, asserting that he was against the war before it began.

Some of Trump's past statements, unearthed by BuzzFeed News, contradict his narrative that he was against the war before it began. Trump offered tepid support in September 2002, answering a question from Howard Stern on whether he would invade Iraq by saying "Yeah, I guess so." And one day into the war, Trump still called the invasion a "tremendous success from a military standpoint."

Trump did, however, express concerns about the invasion of Iraq by late March 2003 and repeatedly throughout the year. But many of his comments suggest he still supported aspects of the war, such as the toppling of Saddam Hussein. In April 2004 — again, in an interview on Howard Stern — Trump emerged as a staunch opponent of the war, and began to push the idea he was never a supporter, claiming, "I was never a fan."

Consider Iraq. After each pounding from U.S . warplanes, Iraq has dusted itself off and gone right back to work developing a nuclear arsenal. Six years of tough talk and U.S. fireworks in Baghdad have done little to slow Iraq's crash program to become a nuclear power. They've got missiles capable of flying nine hundred kilometers—more than enough to reach Tel Aviv. They've got enriched uranium. All they need is the material for nuclear fission to complete the job, and, according to the Rumsfeld report, we don't even know for sure if they've laid their hands on that yet. That's what our last aerial assault on Iraq in 1999 was about. Saddam Hussein wouldn't let UN weapons inspectors examine certain sites where that material might be stored. The result when our bombing was over? We still don't know what Iraq is up to or whether it has the material to build nuclear weapons. I'm no warmonger. But the fact is, if we decide a strike against Iraq is necessary, it is madness not to carry the mission to its conclusion. When we don't, we have the worst of all worlds: Iraq remains a threat, and now has more incentive than ever to attack us.


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Donald Trump Wins South Carolina Primary, Hillary Clinton Wins Nevada Caucus

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Matt Rourke / AP

Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump emerged victorious in their respective contests Saturday, strengthening their positions ahead of Super Tuesday.

Clinton defeated Bernie Sanders in the Nevada caucus by holding onto a more than 52% lead, successfully beating back the momentum her sole rival had gained in recent months.

At the same time, Trump, who was projected to be the winner soon after polls closed in South Carolina, told a boisterous crowd that he expects to do "very, very well" in Nevada when it holds its Republican contest.

With 99% of precincts reporting, Trump took 33% of the vote, but he got a stronger than expected challenge from freshman senators Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz.

Rubio went on to edge out Cruz for second place amid record-breaking voter turnout. The two have been jockeying to stay within arms reach of Trump as the primary season nears an all-important March packed with contests.

Despite a few jeers from the crowd, Trump congratulated Cruz and Rubio on their campaigns, noting that running for president is "tough, nasty, mean, vicious, beautiful. When you win, it is beautiful."

If that's the case, Jeb Bush — the heavily favored candidate early on — had an ugly night and suspended his campaign after disappointing showings in South Carolina and New Hampshire.

The new top three could prove meaningful as the race continues in Nevada and beyond, and as Republicans look for a Trump alternative.

"After tonight, this has become a three-person race and we will win the nomination," Rubio told his supporters.

Cruz, meanwhile, sought to position himself as the only alternative who could succeed in that role.

"I’m the only candidate who has beaten, and can beat, Donald Trump," he said, referring to the Iowa caucus.

In Nevada, Clinton led Sanders 52.2% to 47.7%. But Clinton’s close-call victory was a far cry from what her campaign had previously considered a firewall to Sanders’ momentum, which has continued to gain steam in recent months as the young and disaffected gravitate to his populist message.

John Locher / AP

In a statement, Sanders said he congratulated Clinton in a phone call, but said he was "very proud" of his campaign and looked forward to Super Tuesday.

"Five weeks ago we were 25 points behind and we ended up in a very close election," he said.

In her victory speech, Clinton touched on everything from immigration and racial discrimination to healthcare and campaign finance reform, and took aim at the need to improve the middle class — a common refrain for Sanders.

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"The truth is, we aren't a single-issue country," she said.

Clinton also had a direct message for college students and recent graduates, a demographic that has flocked to Sanders in recent months.

"I know what you’re up against," she said while vowing to push debt relief. "You need help right now with the debt you already have."

With a win in Nevada, Clinton now looks ahead to the Feb. 27 South Carolina primary with more drive behind her message on Sanders: That the Vermont senator’s appeal is limited to a relatively narrow swath of voters.

People line up to participate in the Democratic caucus at the University of Nevada.

Marcio Jose Sanchez / AP

As opposed to New Hampshire and Iowa, the Nevada caucus is seen as a more accurate assessment of a candidate’s appeal to a more diverse electorate, and thus, the rest of nation. Nearly half of Nevada’s transient population is non-white: 28% Latino, 9% African American, and 9% Asian-American / Pacific Islander, according to Nevada State Democratic Party.

In South Carolina, nearly 28% of the population is black and 5% Latino, according to the U.S. Census Bureau — though nearly half of the last two open Democratic primaries have featured an electorate that is approximately half black.

Clinton leads by a significant margin in South Carolina, and among black voters. A win there would put the wind at Clinton’s back going into March, when the majority of states hold their primaries.

LINK: Clinton's Campaign Operative: The Robby Mook Playbook

LINK: After Iowa, Fears Of Yet Another Caucus Disaster In Nevada Fill Democratic Chatter

LINK: Live Updates: Nevada Caucus and South Carolina Primary


Sanders Post-Nevada Messages To Supporters Don't Mention South Carolina

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The text to supporters sent on Saturday

HENDERSON, Nevada — The next contest in the Democratic primary takes place in South Carolina.

But after Bernie Sanders conceded the Nevada caucuses to Hillary Clinton here, the campaign and the candidate weren't talking about it.

Immediately after conceding, his campaign blasted out a text message to supporters that seemed to leave South Carolina out.

"Wow! We helped Bernie narrow a 40-point gap to just a few points in Nevada," the text read. "Let's prepare for Super Tuesday. Reply GIVE to contribute $10 from your phone bill."

In an email to supporters, the campaign sent basically the same message:

"Our campaign can win anywhere," Sanders writes in the email.

And on stage in Henderson, Nevada, Sanders barely mentioned the primary. "And now it's on to Super Tuesday," he told supporters, though he did mention he was flying to South Carolina late in the speech.

Super Tuesday is the shorthand for the 15 caucuses and primaries that take place on March 1.

Polls show Clinton has a significant lead in South Carolina, while there are some Super Tuesday states that better match the makeup of the states where Sanders has done best: Iowa, where he battled Clinton to a virtual tie, and New Hampshire, where he won in a 22-point landslide.

Sources: Bernie Supporters Did Chant "English Only" At Latina Labor Activist

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Dolores Huerta, a longtime and noted labor activist, tweeted that she was trying to offer a Spanish translation when the chants began. Two sources told BuzzFeed News that it happened the way Huerta said it did. Video of the event has been unclear, however.

LAS VEGAS — On Saturday, Bernie Sanders supporters chanted "English only!" at a longtime labor and Latina activist, two neutral sources unaffiliated with either campaign told BuzzFeed News.

Dolores Huerta, the activist, is a Clinton supporter and said on Twitter that she was offering a Spanish-language translation in Las Vegas at Harrah's casino.

Actor America Ferrara — a Clinton surrogate — also tweeted about the incident at Harrah's casino in Las Vegas.


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Jeb Bush Ends His Campaign In South Carolina

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Mark Makela / Getty Images

COLUMBIA, S.C. — It just wasn't enough.

Jeb Bush wanted South Carolina voters to do for his campaign what they did for his brother's 16 years ago. But following a near-bottom finish in the Palmetto State, Bush ended his campaign.

The former Florida governor is projected to finish behind Donald Trump, Ted Cruz, and Marco Rubio, and potentially even John Kasich.

“The presidency is bigger than any one person,” Bush said, when he took to the stage to announce he was suspending his campaign. "It is certainly bigger than any one candidate.”

“I’m proud of the campaign we’ve run to unify our country, but the people of Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina have spoken. I respect their decision,” he said at his election night party in a fairly small room at a Hilton.

"I congratulate my competitors, that are remaining on the island, on their success in a race that has been hard-fought, just as the contest for the presidency should be because it is a tough job. In this campaign, I have stood my ground, refusing to bend to the political winds,” added a very emotional Bush.

After a fourth place finish in New Hampshire, Bush pulled out the stops in South Carolina, emphasizing national security in this military-oriented state and bring his family to the state to campaign. Most of the Bush family — including his brother, former President George W. Bush, and mother, Barbara Bush — joined him on the campaign trail in the days leading up to the primary.

In a statement, George W. Bush said he congratulated his brother on the campaign.

"I told Jeb how proud I am of him and his staff for running a campaign that looked to the future, presented serious policy proposals, and elevated the tone of the race," he said. "Jeb's decision to suspend his campaign reflects his selfless character and patriotism."

The end for the campaign marks a much different finish than he and many members inside the Republican establishment predicted just a year ago, when Bush was the presumed frontrunner for the nomination. He struggled, however, to convert that early advantage into broad support as the campaign wore on, and faced mounting pressure to drop out so the establishment wing of the party could rally behind one anti-Trump candidate.

Ahead of Saturday's primary, Bush’s campaign had events scheduled in Nevada and denied reports that his campaign is running out of money. According to FEC reports filed just as Bush suspended his campaign, the governor raised just $1.6 million in January and had $2.8 million left at the end of last month.

But in an election cycle where outsiders appear to be dominating, voters rejected giving another Bush another chance. Billionaire Donald Trump — whom Bush increasingly attacked on the stump — won handily.

While hugging his supporters and thanking them, a teary-eyed Bush said he had made the decision to drop out just this evening, as reporters covering his campaign shouted out questions at him one last time.

Ted Cruz's Southern Firewall Turns Into A Danger Zone

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Sean Rayford / Getty Images

COLUMBIA, S.C. — Ted Cruz’s disappointing finish in the South Carolina primary could be a decisive moment in his campaign and raises doubts about his strategy of winning big in the South.

The Cruz campaign has repeatedly signaled that the South would be a bulwark of their strategy for winning the nomination, and South Carolina served as the first test of that. The result here could presage what may happen in the March 1 “SEC primary” that will make or break Cruz’s campaign, which is centered around winning evangelical voters in conservative places. But Cruz’s team is downplaying the loss, emphasizing Cruz’s previous win in Iowa and arguing that the stakes were higher here for Rubio, who appears to have eked out a second place finish over Cruz.

“This breaks open after Nevada, that SEC primary where the real delegates are going to be awarded,” said former South Carolina Attorney General Charlie Condon, one of Cruz’s endorsers in the state, in an interview with BuzzFeed News earlier on Saturday.

“There’s gonna be a ticket out of South Carolina,” Condon said. “There’s no way there’s not gonna be a ticket, regardless of the pecking order tonight.”

Cruz made it clear early in the process that the South would be central to his strategy. “I view the SEC primary as a firewall,” he told a gathering of Koch network donors in August. He then embarked on a bus tour of the South.

The SEC primary, which includes big states like Texas and Georgia, is a huge delegate-hauling opportunity for any candidate who can do well there, and Cruz’s campaign manager said on Saturday night that the campaign still expects to clean up on March 1.

“Super Tuesday, we’ve been building for this day the entire time,” Roe told reporters. “We said this on the first day the campaign started. We walked off the stage at Liberty University and we said look we’re going to do well in February, we need to do well in the first four states — I would consider what we’ve done so far as doing well — and then we’re going to have a big night on March 1st in an electoral map that favors us.”

But Trump’s dominance nationally, and his decisive win in South Carolina, bode ill for Cruz’s Southern push. The fact that Trump performs so strongly among evangelicals dents one of the pillars of Cruz’s rationale for running: that he can turn out evangelicals and conservative voters who he says have been staying home en masse for years. CNN exit polls showed Trump winning 33% of evangelicals compared with Cruz’s 27%.

Texas Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick, a Cruz surrogate, told reporters at Cruz’s election night party on Saturday that it was a mistake to view evangelicals as a bloc that can be won as a whole.

“Evangelicals are not monolithic,” Patrick said. “It doesn’t mean just because you’re an evangelical everybody votes the same way. They have different things important to them as well.”

Potentially even more troubling to Cruz’s path is the fact that he doesn’t appear to have as much crossover appeal as hoped outside his base, indicating that his ultraconservative message has a limited ceiling of support among less conservative voters, and doesn’t seem to be winning over non-ideological Trump voters. The same CNN exit poll showed him only winning 13% of non-evangelicals. Cruz often talks about bringing back together a “Reagan coalition” of evangelicals, libertarians, conservatives, and Reagan Democrats, and the campaign has touted his third-place finish in New Hampshire as evidence that the candidate can compete nationally.

Roe told reporters that all the candidates were stealing from each other’s lanes, including Cruz. “People are renting each other’s voters for a little while. This will all shake out,” Roe said.

At Cruz’s election night party on Saturday, surrogates continued to cast the primary as a two-man race between Trump and Cruz and emphasized their line that the state had been a must-win for Rubio, who had locked up basically all of the establishment support with endorsements from Gov. Nikki Haley, Sen. Tim Scott, and Rep. Trey Gowdy.

“If I’m Rubio, I’m really disappointed tonight because I had all these endorsements,” Patrick said.

Speaking to BuzzFeed News a few days before the South Carolina primary, Cruz’s senior communications adviser Jason Miller had downplayed the importance of not winning South Carolina and cast the state as a must-win not for Cruz but for Rubio.

“We’ve won an early primary state,” Miller said at the time. “We’ve already shown that we can beat Donald Trump in an actual early state contest. The pressure on Saturday is on Rubio.”

But there’s no question that a barely-in-second or especially a third-place finish here is disappointing. Cruz himself has spoken fondly of South Carolina, and emphasized his being a natural fit for the state in a late-night chat with reporters aboard his campaign plane the day after the Iowa caucuses earlier this month.

“The parallel between Texas and South Carolina is striking, it really is,” Cruz said at the time. “I remember really thinking about it back in the Bush 2000 campaign.” Cruz said then that “it was amazing how similar Texans and South Carolinians are… they’re southerners, they’re evangelicals, they’re military veterans, they're gun owners. There’s just a feel that is similar, and they feel like Texans.”

In his speech, Cruz called his finish in South Carolina a “remarkable result” and emphasized the fact that he has already bested Trump in an early state, echoing Miller’s comments to BuzzFeed News.

"We are the only campaign that has beaten and can beat Donald Trump,” Cruz said. "That’s why Donald relentlessly attacks us and ignores all the other candidates."

Cruz Campaign Manager: Race Is A "Three Wide Going Into Talladega"

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Joshua Roberts / Reuters

COLUMBIA, S.C. — Ted Cruz's campaign manager Jeff Roe said the "top tier" of the race has winnowed to three people and previewed a path forward out of South Carolina in an 20-minute gaggle with reporters on Saturday night.

Roe gave a preview of the campaign's thinking going forward, and spun the disappointing finish in South Carolina on Saturday, arguing that the campaign is still primed to do well in the March 1 "SEC primary" which includes several Southern states, among them Cruz's home state of Texas. He signaled shifts in the campaign's tactics as the contest spreads out and becomes more of an air war.

"As it goes to a national race, I mean, the construct of the race just changes," Roe said. "It becomes national messaging, it becomes more national fundraising, and your voter communication becomes a little bit different, too. So I think you’ll see edits in the way we campaign just because of the way the states are structured versus a national campaign and that’s why we’re gonna have one of the biggest delegate nights in the calendar, is going to be in 10 days. So the whole race shifts."

"We might have a couple of surprises tomorrow" in terms of messaging, Roe said.

Though Cruz surrogates at Cruz's election night party on Saturday continued to insist that the race is still a two-man race despite Marco Rubio's performance here, Roe didn't say that.

"I’ve never said how many people it was," Roe said. "It’s clear that here’s a top tier and a lower tier and I’m not sure who if anyone else has any announcements tonight that I missed … it’s clear the top tier, there’s three people, we call it three wide going into Talladega."

Despite his appeal to evangelicals and focus on the South, Cruz came in a disappointing third (though close behind Rubio) on Saturday. The result raises questions about the "firewall" of the March 1 states that Cruz has touted, especially since Donald Trump, who won by a wide margin, also won among the evangelical voters Cruz courts.

Roe, who has a reputation as one of the most hard-nosed political operatives in the industry, said that every single vote had been contested.

"Here’s what happens: When you are in a small state, crowding up against each other, you’re fighting five people by their names," he said. "I mean we fought over hand to hand with people’s names. Like we know the names we were fighting for … we knew there were 79,000 people choosing between us and Trump in the last four days. We were calling them. We know their names."

Though Cruz said in the past that Trump would be "unstoppable" if he won Iowa, and Trump has now won two of the early primary states post-Iowa. Roe brushed off any suggestion of Trumpian inevitability.

"I don’t think anybody in the 30s is unstoppable," he said.

Roe also suggested that the departure of Jeb Bush from the race could benefit Cruz, despite there not being much apparent overlap between Bush and Cruz voters (and the fact that another dead-end campaign that directly affects Cruz — Ben Carson's — is still ongoing).

"We get some of Jeb's votes we get some of Jeb's money," he said. "The Bushes are from Texas, as I understand it."


Clyburn: Sanders' Education Plan Is A Disaster For Private Black Colleges

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CHRIS KEANE / Reuters

ORANGEBURG, South Carolina — Days after endorsing Hillary Clinton, Rep. Jim Clyburn has a specific and sharp critique of her opponent: Bernie Sanders' education plan would threaten the existence of smaller, private historically black colleges, Clyburn told BuzzFeed News in an interview.

The third-ranking Democrat in the House is one of the fiercest and most prominent champions for historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) in politics.

The next Democratic primary contest is here, where Clyburn is immensely popular. He said he will speak on Clinton’s behalf at Union Baptist Church in Charleston on Sunday — and also to Clinton herself to map out a game plan about whether the two will campaign together in South Carolina before the Feb. 27 primary.

But on Saturday he told BuzzFeed News in a telephone interview that while he acknowledged Sanders’ campaign is gaining traction with college-aged students in South Carolina, the education plan they’re attracted to doesn't protect institutions like nearby Claflin University, which is private.

“You've got to think about the consequences of things,” Clyburn said. “[If] you start handing out two years of free college at public institutions are you ready for all the black, private HBCUs to close down? That’s what's going to happen,” Clyburn said.

“Tougaloo College in Misssissippi will be closed if you can go to Jackson State for free,” he said.

Clyburn has given time and and significant donations to HBCUs over the year. The Times and Democrat reported last year that Clyburn’s total giving to South Carolina State (Clyburn's public alma mater) and other area colleges is nearly $2 million.

He said he has a special affinity for private HBCUs, firing off to BuzzFeed News a list of the institutions where his family has funded endowments. Part of the reason he wanted to publicly endorse Clinton was in part to bring attention to Allen University, the site of Friday's event. Clyburn serves on the school's board.

Someone Inserted Donald Trump Into "Game Of Thrones" And It's Incredible

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He’s going to build a wall — and the Wildlings are going to pay for it.

Donald Trump has successfully knocked out a bunch of establishment Republican candidates in his quest for the GOP nomination — and now the King-slayer (Jeb-slayer) has found himself in Westeros.

youtube.com

We start out with Trump turning away Khaleesi and her Dothraki followers, maybe because he fears they're all just a bunch of rapists and drug-smugglers.

We start out with Trump turning away Khaleesi and her Dothraki followers, maybe because he fears they're all just a bunch of rapists and drug-smugglers.

ABC / Via youtube.com

Trump also tells the brave Men of the Night's Watch that the northern border may need some reinforcing.

Trump also tells the brave Men of the Night's Watch that the northern border may need some reinforcing.

ABC / Via youtube.com


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Trump Campaign Aggressively Tried To Hire Staffers From Koch Group

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Spencer Platt / Getty Images

Late last year, Donald Trump’s campaign aggressively courted top current and former staffers from a Koch-backed group in an effort to rapidly build up their national ground operation.

There was a reason: Trump's campaign manager, Corey Lewandowski, was formerly the New Hampshire state director for Americans for Prosperity, the biggest Koch-funded group. His intricate knowledge of the state paid off, as Trump soundly won the second state on the Republican calendar.

Trump's plan for upcoming primaries in states voting on March 1 and 15 was supposed to follow a similar model, recruiting top staffers affiliated with the billionaire Koch brothers’ political network — specifically from Americans for Prosperity or AFP — who are well-trained in organizing and getting out the vote in their states.

In some states, Lewandowski was successful, but in many key states that could decide the GOP nominee in the coming weeks, his recruitment efforts failed. At least half a dozen current Koch network staffers in states with upcoming primaries turned down offers, in addition to a few former top staffers who previously worked for the group for several years.

One top Americans for Prosperity staffer in a March primary state who was approached said Lewandowski made a strong case, insisting that “(Trump) was for real. He’s going to go all the way.”

But in the end, he decided to stay with the group. Some others who turned down offers recommended other organizers in the state who were eventually hired by the campaign.

Trump’s investments in ground game have been repeatedly questioned in the last few months, as the Republican Party grapples with whether Trump can convert his poll numbers to actually winning primaries, or if it’s just smoke. After winning the South Carolina primary on Saturday, the March primaries — which are in states where many of the activists were approached — will play a crucial role as Trump's opponents look to make comebacks.

"Anecdotally, I'd say a lot of people have been approached," said another source close to the group. "It's not surprising. The staff is the best trained and most experienced."

Although Lewandowski’s recruitment efforts failed in some key states, he has been able to bring on a handful of staffers who worked for AFP — most of whom, however, weren't still working for the group when they were hired by the Trump campaign. Lewandowski became well-connected with the group's staff and activists outside of New Hampshire during a stint as regional director for the group.

Based on press releases and news reports, those who made them move last year and early this year include: Charles Munoz, former AFP-Nevada state director who is now leading the real estate mogul's efforts in the Silver State; Stuart Jolly, former Oklahoma director who is now advising the campaign; Matt Ciepielowski, who was an AFP-New Hampshire field director and served as state director for Trump's campaign; Alan Cobb, former AFP vice president who is serving as a consultant; Ken Mayo, director of field operations who had the same job for AFP-Florida; and Scott Hagerstorm, Trump's Michigan state director who ran AFP-Michigan.

Trump’s campaign lawyer, Don McGahn, has also represented groups affiliated with the Koch network.

A chunk of the group’s more than 2 million well-trained volunteers across the country are also volunteering for the Trump campaign.

Although other campaigns are using AFP volunteers and some staff as well, the Trump campaign's systematic poaching has rankled some Koch-network donors — they remain frustrated with Trump’s frontrunner status, especially in light of his political views, which really run counter to much of the libertarian-infused views within Koch world.

The network has tried to freeze out Trump, as Politico previously reported, barring him from using its voter data operation and not inviting him to speak at seminars and forums organized by various Koch groups.

Donors affiliated with the Koch groups are also still considering launching an anti-Trump campaign during the primary.

Republicans Rush To Crown Marco Rubio The Anti-Trump Standard-Bearer

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Win Mcnamee / Getty Images

COLUMBIA, South Carolina — The chattering crowd at Marco Rubio's campaign rally Saturday night fell silent for a moment just before 8:45 p.m. as projector screens filled with live Fox News footage of Jeb Bush reading a prepared speech.

“Tonight," Bush said, "I am suspending my campaign."

The roomful of Rubio supporters erupted in ecstatic applause.

The unsportsmanlike cheering was a relatively minor lapse in civility, all things considered. After a long, bruising primary fight between Jeb and his one-time protégé, many of Rubio’s fans were left bitter and at least a little inclined to gloat. But the Rubio campaign wasn't having it. As soon as the news of Jeb’s exit was announced, aides began putting out word to prominent supporters and surrogates that public Bush-bashing was strictly off-limits. The theme of the night was "unity," and Rubio's hyper-disciplined message gurus didn't want anyone going off-script.

"We are all going to be on one team," a Rubio staffer privately reminded a small group of supporters.

In fact, the “team-building” was already underway. Bush's departure from the race Saturday night set in motion a concerted — and urgent — effort within GOP establishment circles to decisively consolidate support behind Rubio and finally elevate a consensus standard-bearer for mainstream Republicans. Even as votes were still being tallied in South Carolina, Rubio's lieutenants were moving swiftly to lock down Jeb's high-dollar donors, and party elites were quietly leaning on high-profile officeholders in the GOP to get on board with Marco-mentum.

In the coming week, the campaign plans to start rolling out a parade of new endorsements as Republican leaders make a show of coalescing around the fresh-faced Florida senator.

The backstage maneuvering to boost Rubio was described to BuzzFeed News by half a dozen GOP sources — some with official ties to the candidate, others without — who requested anonymity to discuss internal strategy.

A Rubio spokesman declined to comment Saturday night on these efforts, and the sources interviewed stressed that no one expects Rubio to become the frontrunner overnight. Last week, Rubio’s campaign manager began openly discussing the possibility that they would have to fight all the way to a brokered convention in Cleveland.

But already, Rubio’s path to the mantle of establishment savior is remarkable for its lack of modern precedent. This is a candidate who placed third in Iowa and fifth in New Hampshire; who lags a mile behind the leading candidate and has yet to win a single primary. In fact, the closest Rubio has come so far to winning a contest was here in South Carolina, where he beat out Ted Cruz for second place by a microscopic margin — and proceeded to celebrate this triumph with perhaps the loftiest victory speech ever given by a non-victor.

"If it is God’s will that we should win this election, then history will say that on this night in South Carolina, we took the first step forwards in the beginning of a new American century," Rubio told supporters on Saturday night.

But while he has been mocked lately for his habit of unearned end-zone dancing, Rubio had a real accomplishment to celebrate Saturday night. In a historically crowded and competitive field of contenders, he has outlasted every other viable candidate deemed acceptable by the Republican establishment. He may have gotten this far by process of elimination — but when the process is as brutal as it’s been in this race, Rubio’s team counts survival as a win.

They also know, however, that Washington Republicans’ rush to crown an establishment champion now is a direct response to Donald Trump, whose double-digit domination of the primary field in South Carolina inflamed the growing sense of panic among party elders. After two blowout victories in a row, the billionaire has revealed frighteningly few electoral vulnerabilities — winning moderates in New Hampshire and evangelicals in South Carolina — and unless something dramatically changes soon, Trump appears poised to coast to the nomination. Impatient party leaders have determined they can’t wait for Rubio to fully prove himself, or for John Kasich and Ben Carson to drop out — they need an anti-Trump gladiator now.

While welcoming the support, Rubio’s team is quick to reject the “establishment” label — and to be sure, their candidate is considerably more conservative than other party-approved nominees in recent history, like John McCain or Bob Dole. But Rubio’s appeal to GOP elites has never been rooted in ideology; it’s about his talents as a communicator, and his compelling personal biography, and the aspirational nature of his message. In the days leading up to Saturday’s primary, Rubio barnstormed South Carolina with an Indian-American governor and a black senator by his side, preaching earnestly on one stage after another that this dynamic trio represented the “new face” of the Republican Party.

Publicly, Rubio is insisting he will keep running a positive campaign, telling reporters Sunday that he’s not obliged to “take on” The Donald. But with party stalwarts falling in line and the establishment rallying to his candidacy, Rubio’s mandate is clear: Stop Trump.

With the post-Jeb landscape still shifting, sources in Rubio’s camp said their immediate goal is to capitalize with a strong showing in Tuesday’s Nevada caucuses — if not topping Trump, then at least handily beating the rest of the field. Rubio’s campaign team in the state has meticulously built what they believe to be the best ground game in the party, and they’re hoping Jeb’s exit will give them an extra last-minute bump.

According to one Rubio adviser, top Bush backers in the state could begin endorsing Rubio as soon as his Sunday evening rally in Las Vegas. The adviser declined to say which endorsements were on the table, but Jeb had racked up an impressive array of high-profile supporters in Nevada prior to dropping out. Among them: Sen. Dean Heller, Rep, Mark Amodei, and state senate majority leader Paul Anderson — a prominent Mormon politician in a state where a quarter of the caucusgoers in the last two elections were LDS.

Rubio, who as a child briefly converted to Mormonism with his family when they levied in Vegas, is hoping his unique ties to the tightly networked faith community will help him turn out Mitt Romney’s Mormon army.

Early Sunday, the Huffington Post reported that Romney himself would endorse Rubio, but sources told the New York Times and the Washington Post that the former nominee was unlikely to make an endorsement soon. In any case, according to a Nevada-based strategist who’s neutral in 2016, Romney has been privately expressing a preference for Rubio in conversations with friends, loyalists, and former donors — making little secret of his aversion to Trump, and telling the strategist that Cruz is “not my cup of tea.” Of the candidates still in the race, Romney has argued, Rubio stands the best chance of winning in November. While an official Rubio endorsement may come eventually, Romney’s assessment of the field has rocketed through his network of wealthy donors and Mormon politicos.

Beyond Nevada, Team Rubio hopes the coalescing of the establishment will help them rapidly replenish their war chest, especially as former Bush donors come on board. Republicans inside the campaign and out said that an endorsement from Jeb was possible — perhaps even likely — and that influential figures in the Floridians’ overlapping orbits were pushing for it to happen sooner rather than later.

Rubio’s team is confident that Jeb’s base of voters will naturally flock to their candidate without much prodding required. But they worry that some die-hard loyalists in the donor community will wait for Bush’s blessing before they start shelling out to Rubio. (Meanwhile, Cruz’s campaign manager Jeff Roe told reporters Saturday night they expected to pick off a portion of Jeb’s contributors, cracking, “The Bushes are from Texas, from what I understand.”) One source also said there was movement Saturday within the Rubio campaign to acquire access to Bush’s expansive voter database and high-end targeting software.

Sources involved in the effort to elevate Rubio said their biggest hurdle at this point might be the calendar. With Super Tuesday fast approaching, there’s an exceedingly tight window to work out the mechanics of the establishment’s coalescence and to transform the Rubio operation into the kind of Death Star Romney used in 2012. There’s little time to waste catering to the delusions of the long-shot rivals, or the wounded egos of the also-rans.

“Marco is our last, best hope,” said one pro-Rubio strategist, adding that the alternative is “nominating Donald Trump and letting him destroy the Republican Party forever.”

Bernie Sanders In South Carolina Sounds Very Different

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Joe Raedle / Getty Images

GREENVILLE, South Carolina — The day ended with the Sanders campaign classic: a huge rally in a college town.

He spoke to more than 5,000 in the Bon Secours Wellness Arena here, the temporary home of the Clemson Tigers basketball team. There was the cheering, the laughing, the finishing Sanders’s sentences.

But it all sounds very, very different in South Carolina. The candidate’s tone was markedly different than 48 hours earlier, when an exuberant Sanders proclaimed he’d win the Nevada caucuses. (He lost by enough for rival Hillary Clinton’s campaign to pronounce their “firewall” against Sanders had held.)

In Nevada, Sanders was the candidate on the rise, the man about to break apart the Democratic establishment and put his grassroots revolution it’s place.

“I have a feeling, folks, we’re going to make history tomorrow,” Sanders said Friday night in Henderson, Nevada. “It could well be that in 10, 20, or 30 years from now people may well look back and what happened in Nevada and say this was the beginning of the political revolution.”

Sanders in Greenville was wistful and taking stock of how far he’d come. There was no “feeling” about South Carolina — there was hope and a life lesson.

“On Saturday, South Carolina has the opportunity to make American history and I hope you will,” Sanders said, reading from notes. “You know, we go around once — we may as well make history as we go around. We may as well do something that people will remember decades from today.”

He went on to talk about how his bid had made “Wall Street nervous,” and had tapped into progressive, working class angst other Democrats had ignored. That rich vein of liberal intemperance was still carrying The Bern forward, he said.


“This campaign is gaining momentum because we are listening to the American people we we are listening in a way that other campaigns don't,” Sanders said.

More than one observer noted the Greenville crowd was overwhelmingly white and young — not a great look for a South Carolina Democratic primary, where the electorate skews older and has been approximately half black in the past two contested Democratic primaries.

There was little anecdotal evidence Sunday to refute polling that shows Sanders trailing Clinton considerably among black voters here. Early in the afternoon, Sanders stopped at the post-service Sunday Dinner at Brookland Baptist Church in West Columbia, one of the largest black churches in the region and a famous 2008 stop for President Obama on the way to his upset South Carolina win.

Former NAACP president Ben Jealous, a top Sanders surrogate, tried to recapture some of that Obama feeling at Brookland, introducing Sanders for short remarks by dropping both of Obama’s 2008 catchphrases, “fired up and ready to go” and “yes we can!” Neither had much effect — the churchgoers sitting around a large buffet at Brookland clapped politely for Sanders, and a handful asked for selfies. Many kept eating and talked amongst themselves while Sanders walked around the room with Jealous and state Rep. Terry Alexander, another Sanders backer, leading him around. Others actually worked their way down the steam trays, filling their plates behind Sanders while he spoke about his promise to root out and eliminate racial biases in the criminal justice system.

The headlines after the event were not the stuff of Sandersmentum: “Muted Response to Sanders at South Carolina Church,” wrote the New York Times. “Sanders greeted politely, if not enthusiastically, as he courts black vote at S.C. church,” wrote the Washington Post.

None of this comes as a great surprise to the Sanders campaign. After the Nevada loss, Sanders barely mentioned South Carolina in his speech. None of his campaign material blasted out to supporters to raise money and keep the faith after Nevada referred to Saturday’s primary here. Privately, aides vehemently deny the campaign is skipping South Carolina — a move that could be seen as offensive in black political circles, and solidify the narrative that Sanders isn’t really competing for the non-white vote.

The Sanders campaign prefers to look ahead to Super Tuesday on March 1, where they see potential for Sanders to do well in a number of the 11 states up for grabs.

The campaign schedule shows where the priorities are. After campaigning in South Carolina for a day — the first half of which was spent talking to a national audience on the Sunday talk show circuit — Sanders was scheduled to be back on his charter jet Monday, heading off for stops in Massachusetts and Virginia before coming back to South Carolina Tuesday afternoon.

Bernie Sanders Sounds Very Different In South Carolina

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Joe Raedle / Getty Images

GREENVILLE, South Carolina — The day ended with the Sanders campaign classic: a huge rally in a college town.

He spoke to more than 5,000 in the Bon Secours Wellness Arena here, the temporary home of the Clemson Tigers basketball team. There was the cheering, the laughing, the finishing Sanders’ sentences.

But it all sounds very, very different in South Carolina. The candidate’s tone was markedly different than 48 hours earlier, when an exuberant Sanders proclaimed he’d win the Nevada caucuses. (He lost by enough for rival Hillary Clinton’s campaign to pronounce their “firewall” against Sanders had held.)

In Nevada, Sanders was the candidate on the rise, the man about to break apart the Democratic establishment and put his grassroots revolution it’s place.

“I have a feeling, folks, we’re going to make history tomorrow,” Sanders said Friday night in Henderson, Nevada. “It could well be that in 10, 20, or 30 years from now people may well look back and what happened in Nevada and say this was the beginning of the political revolution.”

Sanders in Greenville was wistful and taking stock of how far he’d come. There was no “feeling” about South Carolina — there was hope and a life lesson.

“On Saturday, South Carolina has the opportunity to make American history and I hope you will,” Sanders said, reading from notes. “You know, we go around once — we may as well make history as we go around. We may as well do something that people will remember decades from today.”

He went on to talk about how his bid had made “Wall Street nervous,” and had tapped into progressive, working class angst other Democrats had ignored. That rich vein of liberal intemperance was still carrying The Bern forward, he said.

“This campaign is gaining momentum because we are listening to the American people we we are listening in a way that other campaigns don't,” Sanders said.

More than one observer noted the Greenville crowd was overwhelmingly white and young — not a great look for a South Carolina Democratic primary, where the electorate skews older and has been approximately half black in the past two contested Democratic primaries.

There was little anecdotal evidence Sunday to refute polling that shows Sanders trailing Clinton considerably among black voters here. Early in the afternoon, Sanders stopped at the post-service Sunday Dinner at Brookland Baptist Church in West Columbia, one of the largest black churches in the region and a famous 2008 stop for President Obama on the way to his upset South Carolina win.

Former NAACP president Ben Jealous, a top Sanders surrogate, tried to recapture some of that Obama feeling at Brookland, introducing Sanders for short remarks by dropping both of Obama’s 2008 catchphrases, “fired up and ready to go” and “yes we can!” Neither had much effect — the churchgoers sitting around a large buffet at Brookland clapped politely for Sanders, and a handful asked for selfies. Many kept eating and talked amongst themselves while Sanders walked around the room with Jealous and state Rep. Terry Alexander, another Sanders backer, leading him around. Others actually worked their way down the steam trays, filling their plates behind Sanders while he spoke about his promise to root out and eliminate racial biases in the criminal justice system.

The headlines after the event were not the stuff of Sandersmentum: “Muted Response to Sanders at South Carolina Church,” wrote the New York Times. “Sanders greeted politely, if not enthusiastically, as he courts black vote at S.C. church,” wrote the Washington Post.

None of this comes as a great surprise to the Sanders campaign. After the Nevada loss, Sanders barely mentioned South Carolina in his speech. None of his campaign material blasted out to supporters to raise money and keep the faith after Nevada referred to Saturday’s primary here. Privately, aides vehemently deny the campaign is skipping South Carolina — a move that could be seen as offensive in black political circles, and solidify the narrative that Sanders isn’t really competing for the non-white vote.

The Sanders campaign prefers to look ahead to Super Tuesday on March 1, where they see potential for Sanders to do well in a number of the 11 states up for grabs.

The campaign schedule shows where the priorities are. After campaigning in South Carolina for a day — the first half of which was spent talking to a national audience on the Sunday talk show circuit — Sanders was scheduled to be back on his charter jet Monday, heading off for stops in Massachusetts and Virginia before coming back to South Carolina Tuesday afternoon.

Trump's Nevada-Themed Twitter Photo Appeared To Feature A Mountain In Argentina

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The image has since been removed.

Ahead of Tuesday's Nevada caucus, Trump had changed his Twitter background photo to an image of a mountain.

Ahead of Tuesday's Nevada caucus, Trump had changed his Twitter background photo to an image of a mountain.

@realDonaldTrump / Via @realDonaldTrump

Overlaying the mountain were Nevada's state seal, an American flag, the word "NEVADA" in all capital letters, the date of the Nevada caucus, and Trump's campaign branding.

Overlaying the mountain were Nevada's state seal, an American flag, the word "NEVADA" in all capital letters, the date of the Nevada caucus, and Trump's campaign branding.

@realDonaldTrump / Via @realDonaldTrump

A senior adviser to Trump, Dan Scavino, also featured the image on his Twitter account.

A senior adviser to Trump, Dan Scavino, also featured the image on his Twitter account.

@DanScavino / Via @DanScavino

A Google reverse image search says the best guess for the image is Monte Fitz Roy — a mountain in Argentine Patagonia.

A Google reverse image search says the best guess for the image is Monte Fitz Roy — a mountain in Argentine Patagonia.


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How Clinton's Obama Veterans In Nevada Postponed A Political Revolution

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John Locher / AP

LAS VEGAS — After Iowa but before Bernie Sanders’ big win in New Hampshire, Jorge Neri picked up the phone.

The Nevada organizing director for the Clinton campaign was incensed. Staffers for Sanders’ campaign were going around saying that their campaign had cracked the code on Hispanic voters, after Sanders won the majority of precincts where Iowa’s small Hispanic population lives.

So, on a conference call with the Clinton campaign’s organizers in his state, Neri literally read the words of Erika Andiola, a top Sanders staffer and well-known activist. He told them sarcastically that the Sanders plan was to win the state by parachuting into Nevada just two weeks before and "talking to people."

And then he told them: I want you to go out one extra hour knocking on doors tonight.

Two weeks later, Hillary Clinton won Nevada in a close but decisive win — the product of a 10-month organizing effort led by two Obama campaign veterans and 22 full-time staffers, one that entailed 1,100 one-on-one meetings with constituencies ranging from Latinos and Native Americans to rural Nevadans and veterans, all by last summer, and before Sanders had even hired a single staffer in the state.

Before Hillary Clinton took the stage to give her victory speech on Saturday, she was introduced not by one of the high-profile Latino surrogates the campaign sent to Nevada in the final days, but by Emmy Ruiz, the state director.

"From the bottom of my heart, I want to thank all my field organizers who have worked so hard and our precinct captains who knocked on doors in 120-degree weather and when it was 15 degrees in Reno and everywhere in between," she said, through tears.

Last April, Neri and Ruiz arrived in Nevada with a mission. In 2012, they had helped Barack Obama win Nevada with the highest margin of any battleground state that year and 70% Latino support. They wanted to deliver again.

Quietly confident that the results would reflect the months of meetings and work they put into the state, Ruiz and Neri talked about what got them to this point, in an interview a week before the caucus, at a coffee shop named Beat that sells vinyl records. This story is drawn from a series of conversations with them and other operatives inside and outside the campaign.

There were a few challenges to begin with: They had to build a new voter list. This was a caucus in a primary, not a general election. Nevada is a transient state, and unlike Iowa and New Hampshire and their established history of early voting, the Nevada caucus is relatively new. Last time, Clinton won the popular vote in 2008, but Obama edged her in delegates — so "equal coverage among different geographical areas," Neri said, was imperative.

And from the start, they wanted to go right at established narrative that Clinton had waffled on immigration in the past. They wanted to do something big and bold as her first event in Nevada to show that she was serious about making the issue a priority.

So they started the official campaign in Nevada in May at historic Rancho High School in North Las Vegas. Clinton went there. She committed to going further than Obama had on executive action, a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants, phasing out detention centers, and protecting the parents of DREAMers from deportation.

The event may actually be one of the most significant of the entire campaign — the Democratic frontrunner staking out a very liberal, expansive position on immigration at the very beginning — and one of the most overlooked.

People in the room — including the activists brought to the event by Neri and Ruiz — had been prepared to challenge Clinton on her positions. But they didn’t…really have anything to say.

The comments from the time are so positive that they seem almost alien now, in a campaign getting nastier every day.

Andiola, a tough immigration activist who had confronted Clinton in 2014 and would go on to be a fierce critic of her after joining the Sanders campaign, said she was "happy" after the event, calling it “a really great step recognizing what she could do."

United We Dream — which interrupted one of her speeches later in the year — said Clinton signaled that the 2016 election may stand out as the first time in history that the country would have a substantive debate on immigration policy and executive actions, including "full and equal citizenship for our communities." (This was before Donald Trump entered the race.)

Amanda Renteria, the national political director, as well as Lorella Praeli, at the time consulted by the campaign before she came on officially, both had a hand in the event. But Ruiz and Neri led it, bringing Astrid Silva, Blanca Gamez, and other DREAMers who they had longstanding relationships with to talk to Clinton at the roundtable event.

"It had Jorge’s vision," said Ben Monterroso, the executive director of Mi Familia Vota, who has worked with him.

Ruiz understood that the campaign had to push back against the narrative that Clinton wasn't strong enough on immigration.

"I don’t think we had any opponents in the race yet at the time," she said. "I know there was this narrative that we had to own and work on."

Monterroso said the seeds planted that day in May bloomed Saturday when he saw some activists who work for the Progressive Leadership Alliance of Nevada (PLAN) standing with Clinton.

"The fact that you saw today all those groups fighting for immigration reform, groups like PLAN, a bunch of kids were very openly supporting Hillary Clinton," he said. "They worked with them very heavily."

(PLAN stresses that the organization did not endorse Clinton and its staff can do what they choose to on their own personal time.)

And before Sanders had a staffer in the state, Ruiz and Neri headed on a summer bus listening tour. Specifically, it was an SUV tour ("an American one,” Ruiz said) that crisscrossed the state to visit with Native Americans, Asian-American and Pacific Islander and LGBT groups, rural Nevadans, and residents of an actual ghost town.

As part of the rural program, the Nevada team confirmed a precinct captain in Goldfield, an old mining town that once struck it rich when gold was found. (It has an actual entry on Ghosttowns.com and a rumored haunted hotel.)

"There are 250 people that live in that community, including a group of Hillary supporters," Neri said.

At the end of August, the Clinton campaign rolled out her plan for rural America, which includes elements like access to broadband internet, health care, and substance abuse prevention, and was largely meant for Iowa. But the feedback from that SUV tour also made it in.

"Access to fresh produce is another one," Neri said. "These are people who may have to drive 20 miles to have fresh produce or to have a baby."

For Neri, who grew up in Chicago, he saw some of the same problems in rural areas that can be found in the inner city. "The drug epidemic is very real," he said of heroin and meth addiction. "The use of it is tearing these small towns apart."

The campaign did well in rural areas, keeping it close in areas like Pahrump — where 300 people came out to see Bill Clinton at 9 a.m. leading up to the caucus — and winning in others, like Ely, a place they visited during the summer tour, and where Sanders was supposed to do well.

Billy Vassiliadis, the CEO of R&R Partners and a Nevada Democratic operative for more than 35 years, said Clinton had the advantage of Ruiz's experience in 2008, which showed the operation had to reach into the farthest corners of the state to ensure a win.

"Rural voters in a close race make a big difference," he said. "The rural tour came to people that don’t usually see Democrats, who are not used to seeing a presidential campaign be not only visible, but asking their concerns."

But Latino voters were always the ones they hoped and expected to dominate.

East Las Vegas is one of those working-class Latino strongholds where the Clinton campaign hoped they could do really well. Sanders had an office in the same area of town, a bit smaller, with a diverse group of young volunteers — including 15- and 16-year-olds and lots of high school and college kids. The Clinton office was similarly diverse, and it had young people too, but it was an older group, including older black and white women among them.

The Clinton campaign hoped their own group of 30 high school volunteers from the area speaking to residents was going to help them win. (Ruiz and Neri did something similar in 2012 using the "neighborhood team model": neighbors talking to neighbors about issues that matter to them.) But if the caucus process is new to Nevadans in general, it was even more unfamiliar to the Latino community.

Operating under this assumption, Clinton field organizers believed that the key to making inroads was not bringing up the caucus immediately.

"Support for Hillary was there, but turning their support into an actual caucusgoer is difficult," said Natalie Montelongo, a 29-year-old staffer from Texas who worked with the high school students.

Montelongo and her organizing partner, Vanessa Valdivia, understood that the organizing model works: First tell their life story to the voter, and hear their life story, and make three to five contacts with them. At some point in the middle of that process, once they knew each other, the organizers felt comfortable asking, "Do you know what a caucus is?"

"People have to know what the caucus is," Valdivia said, noting that the campaign held Spanish-language caucus trainings, too. "They would say, 'I was here last election and no one told me this was happening.'"

The campaign put a lot of thought into the fact that a simple "Go out and vote!" message in Spanish wasn't going to be enough. The smallest details mattered: Ruiz came up with "Caucus conmigo," or "Caucus with me," an initially unpopular phrase that the organizers warmed up to.

This methodical, painstaking approach was possible because of the head start the campaign had, and it looks to have worked: In the most heavily Hispanic districts of populous Clark County, which includes East Las Vegas, Clinton won close to 60% support, higher than her overall vote share in the county as a whole.

In an email to supporters a week before the caucus, the Sanders campaign made a call for “volunteers across the country to help us call Spanish-speaking voters in Nevada and find out who is for Bernie and who is still undecided.”

"You have had to understand the Latino culture," Vassiliadis said. "It is one of building a relationship, one of building loyalty, it's not transactional. You can't make a promise, do a deal, and walk away. There needs to be trust and a sense of belonging, a sense that there is a heartfelt commitment."

Despite the strong early lead, things got a little messy at the end. Sanders showed he can compete in a state with a larger nonwhite population, and the campaign, citing an entrance poll of 213 Hispanics, insists that it won the Latino vote. The Clinton campaign disputes this, pointing to the Clark County data.

The entrance poll showed Sanders with 53% support among that group, within the 7% margin of error. Latinos made up 19% of the electorate of about 80,000 caucusgoers — meaning close to 16,000 Hispanics participated, a sign that both campaigns mobilized them. There is now real evidence that Latinos, who are much younger than other demographic groups, will continue to offer an opening to Sanders in getting wide swaths of their support.

As the national media descended on Nevada in the final week leading up to the caucus, declaring the notoriously difficult-to-poll state a dead heat, the pressure was unbelievably high for Ruiz and Neri, said Andres Ramirez, a Democratic superdelegate supporting Clinton.

"Especially with all the hysteria after New Hampshire, the pressure to win Nevada became so great, but they didn’t buckle, they didn’t collapse, they stayed resolved, they stayed focused, they increased their efforts and pulled it out," he said. "It would be easy for any young operative, when the stakes are that high, to lose it and make mistakes and start being erratic."

Ruiz and Neri were bemused by Sanders staff who said they would win the state powered by enthusiasm for the candidate.

"I do question anyone who doesn’t really take this state’s ground game seriously," Ruiz said last week. "This is not an easy state; since it is such a transient state, you have to put in work. If there was a misstep it was thinking you could swoop in, put on a badge, and help make a difference."

Neri said there is no "silver bullet for Latino outreach" and noted that what he found was the least understood part of the well-publicized incident where Andiola with the Sanders campaign dismissed the endorsement of the DREAMer Silva as a "press hit."

That group of DREAMers who met with Clinton last year were on policy calls leading up to the event, Neri said, and Silva was giving the campaign input well before she endorsed Clinton publicly.

"That’s why it's funny that Erika wanted to hit us as a press hit," he said. "We could have blown those meetings up, just to get a press hit, but we did it behind the scenes."

A week before the caucus, in the coffee shop, Ruiz was reflective and already getting nostalgic, remembering days at far-flung parts of the state. She remembered a Get Out the Caucus training during Christmas and New Year's in December. Organizers were only given 48 hours off — and that was the actual moment she felt they would win the state.

"To see people come in, organizers who have already sacrificed so much," she said, leaning forward, tears in her eyes. "When we concluded training they were going around talking about the reason for their commitment, talking about the volunteers, and talking about our family here. That’s the stuff that makes me know we’re going to see magic happen in Nevada."

John Kasich Says Many Women "Left Their Kitchens" To Support His First Campaign

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A questioner later told him: “I’ll come out to support you, but I won’t be coming out of the kitchen.”

Speaking at a town hall in Fairfax, Virginia on Monday, John Kasich said many women "left their kitchens" to support his first campaign for the Ohio legislature in 1978.

youtube.com

"How did I get elected? I didn't have anybody for me, we just got an army of people, who um, and many women who left their kitchens to go out and go door-to-door, and put yard signs up for me. You know, all the way back, when things were different. Now you call homes and everybody's out working, but at that time, early days, it was an army of the women that really helped me to get elected to the state senate and into that job."

"First off, I want to say, your comment earlier about the women came out the kitchen to support you, I'll come to support you, but I won't be coming out of the kitchen," she said.

"I gotcha," Kasich replied.


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Trump In 2002: Bush Presidency Shows Economy Does Better Under Democrats

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“It’s a little surprising because it does say that we do not do quite as well under the Republicans and we should be doing better than the Republican in theory than the Democrats.”

Branden Camp / Getty Images

Donald Trump, asked in 2002 about President George W. Bush's performance on the economy, said he thought Bush was doing a "pretty good job," but not as well as under a Democratic administration.

On a July 2002 edition of Your World with Neil Cauvto, Trump was asked if "it hurt, though, that here [Bush} was branded the first MBA president, businessman in the White House. Perversely, does that hurt?"

"It's a little surprising because it does say that we do not do quite as well under the Republicans and we should be doing better than the Republican in theory than the Democrats," Trump said.

"But I think he is doing a very good job, and I think he will continue to do a very good job. He is going to end up being a very good president," added Trump.

Trump would go on to make similar comments two years later, in an interview with CNN's Wolf Blizter.

"In many cases, I probably identify more as Democrat," Trump said in 2004. "It just seems that the economy does better under the Democrats than the Republicans. Now, it shouldn't be that way. But if you go back, I mean it just seems that the economy does better under the Democrats. ...But certainly we had some very good economies under Democrats, as well as Republicans. But we've had some pretty bad disaster under the Republicans."

Military Blocks Stories About Prisoner Issues From Reaching Chelsea Manning

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Patrick Semansky / AP

Military officials at the U.S. Disciplinary Barracks (USDB) at Fort Leavenworth blocked a mail packet of articles about prisoner issues, including a BuzzFeed News story, from reaching Chelsea Manning, the Electronic Frontier Foundation said in a blog post Monday.

Manning was sentenced to 35 years in prison in 2013 for providing classified and sensitive military documents to Wikileaks. USDB officials recently blocked a packet of materials mailed to Manning because they contained “printed Internet materials, including email, of a volume exceeding five pages per day or the distribution of which may violate U.S. copyright laws," according to the EFF, a digital rights advocacy group.

However, EFF investigative researcher Dave Maass said in the blog post that he does not believe the page-limit was the issue, "since the documents [the USDB] did deliver were far longer than any of the other materials and exceeded five pages. That means that it was potentially copyright concerns that resulted in Manning’s mail being censored."

The packet of material, sent by a member of Manning's support network, included several EFF blog posts on the issue of prisoners' digital rights, as well as a BuzzFeed News article on a group of South Carolina inmates who received years in solitary confinement for filming a music video while behind bars.

In a letter to the U.S. Disciplinary Barracks, EFF executive director Cindy Cohn said all of EFF's articles are released under Creative Commons and asked "that you provide these materials to Ms. Manning without delay."

The military has also blocked Manning from receiving a copy of artist Molly Crabapple's book, Drawing Blood, because of its "objectionable" content, according to a letter received by Crabapple.

Maass said "prisoners do not lose all rights when they step behind bars."

"Not only are prisoners allowed to access a wide range of news articles, legal documents, and other education materials, but as a society we should actively encourage prisoners to access materials that help them better understand their rights and the legal system," he wrote. "Prisoners like Manning who want to stay up on events that can directly impact them and others should be supported, not prevented, from accessing information."

The U.S. Disciplinary Barracks did not immediately respond to a request for comment.


Cruz Communications Director Out After Sharing False Story About Rubio

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Jim Young / Reuters

LAS VEGAS — Ted Cruz has asked for the resignation of his communications director, Rick Tyler, after Tyler shared a false report about Marco Rubio, Cruz told reporters on Monday.

"I've spent this morning investigating what happened," Cruz said. "And this morning I asked for Rick Tyler's resignation. I have made clear in this campaign that we will conduct this campaign with the very highest standards of integrity. That has been how we've conducted it from day one."

Tyler had shared on social media a report that purported falsely that Rubio had made a negative comment about the Bible to a Cruz staffer. He later apologized to Rubio on Facebook, saying, "I assumed wrongly that the story was correct. According to the Cruz staffer, the senator made a friendly and appropriate remark."

The incident comes as accusations of "dirty tricks" have become a central narrative about the Cruz campaign over the last couple weeks. Cruz's rivals have accused his campaign of a string of underhanded maneuvers; Cruz responded to the accusations in a lengthy press conference last week. Cruz has apologized directly to Ben Carson for his campaign's suggesting to Iowa voters that Carson was dropping out ahead of the caucuses.

"Rick Tyler's a good man; this was a grave error of judgment," Cruz told reporters on Monday. "It turned out the news story he sent around was false, but I'll tell you even if it was true, we are not a campaign that's gonna question the faith of another candidate. Even if it was true our campaign shouldn't have sent it — that's why I've asked for Rick Tyler's resignation."

Cruz said that he had not met or spoken with Rubio on Monday, contrary to a report circulating on Twitter that he had.

NBC reporter Katy Tur said on Twitter that Tyler had been scheduled for a live hit on MSNBC but "abruptly left":

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

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