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Clinton defends progressive record against Sanders critique

<p>For Bernie Sanders, the virtual tie in Iowa was as good as a win.</p><p>"What Iowa has begun tonight is a political revolution," Sanders said.</p><p>But there may have been another winner: socialism.</p><p>A <a href="http://media.bloomberg.com/bb/avfile/rgsikEKtNf30" target="_blank">poll in early January</a> found 43 percent of Iowan Democratic caucus-goers describe themselves as socialist, while 38 percent describe themselves as capitalist.</p><p>We tried to find some socialists at a Hillary Clinton rally, but didn't have much luck.</p><p>"Oh god. ... I don’t know about that question. Can I pass on that one?" one voter said.</p><p>"I think there's gonna be a problem with the general electorate as far as anything labeled socialist," another said.</p><p>"I don't know; I just think everything Hillary stands for I like," said another.</p><p>At a Sanders rally, it was easy to find self-described socialists.</p><p>"People are fed up with the rich controlling everything, and they want the wealth to be for everyone," a supporter said.</p><p>"I think capitalism hasn't really been working for a lot of people," another said.</p><p>"The statistics coming out of Europe are far better than what we have. Why not try it?" another suggested.</p><p>Sanders isn't a full-fledged socialist.</p><p>"I think we should look to countries like Denmark, like Norway, like Sweden, and learn from what they have accomplished for their working people," Sanders said.</p><p>But some of his supporters are comfortable with the word.</p><p>"People associated it with communism and it wasn't something you would tell your employer. ... I really give Bernie credit for keeping the topic in the light," someone said.</p><p>"I think socialism's a good idea that got a bad name because it was associated with a dangerous country, ... but our generation didn't grow up with that," a person said.</p><p>"Beloved American programs are socialist and it shouldn't be a word that we’re afraid of," said a supporter.</p><p>But these are primary voters — usually more ideological than the general public.</p><p>A <a href="http://www.gallup.com/poll/183713/socialist-presidential-candidates-least-appealing.aspx?utm_source=Politics&utm_medium=newsfeed&utm_campaign=tiles" target="_blank">Gallup poll in June</a> found Americans were most biased against electing a socialist president. Fifty percent said they would not, while 47 percent said they would.</p><p>So now the question is this: Can Sanders sway the general public?</p>
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MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP) — Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders opened up a new line of attack in the Democratic presidential primary on Wednesday, putting Hillary Clinton on the defensive over her liberal credentials just days after she eked a slim victory in the Iowa caucuses.

Sanders, who has a sizable lead in the upcoming New Hampshire primary, rattled off a list of issues where Clinton isn't in sync with the liberal wing of the party, including trade, Wall Street regulation, climate change, campaign finance and the 2002 authorization of the war in Iraq.

""I do not know any progressive who has a super PAC and takes $15 million from Wall Street," Sanders said, during a candidate forum sponsored by CNN. "That's just not progressive."

Clinton moved quickly to defend her record, saying that under Sanders' criteria President Barack Obama, Vice President Joe Biden and even the deceased Minnesota Sen. Paul Wellstone, a champion of liberal causes, would not be considered progressive.

"I know where I stand," said Clinton. "But I don't think it helps for the senator to be making those kinds of comparisons because clearly we all share the same hopes and aspirations for our country."

The back-and-forth on progressive credentials was the latest example of tensions between Clinton and Sanders as the race nears the Feb. 9 New Hampshire primary. The Democratic rivals are expected to appear at a debate on Thursday night and both camps have quarreled over the timing and locations of three debates planned for later this spring.

Clinton has questioned Sanders' commitment to gun control and whether his proposal to create a universal health care system might endanger Obama's signature health care law. Sanders, meanwhile, casts Clinton as an establishment figure and an inconsistent champion of liberal causes such as the environment, trade and campaign finance reform.

Speaking at a town hall meeting in Derry, New Hampshire earlier in the day, the former secretary of state called Sanders attacks on her ideology a "low blow," before listing a series of liberal accomplishments that she described as progressive, including her work on expanding access to children's health insurance, advocating for women and gay people and pushing for gun control measures.

"We've been fighting the progressive fight and getting results for people for years," Clinton said. "I hope we keep it on the issues. Because if it's about our records, hey, I'm going to win by a landslide."

But Clinton's team clearly sees an opening in Sanders' comment. On Twitter, Clinton's top spokeswoman Jennifer Palmieri compared it to the moment in 2008 when President Barack Obama said during a debate that Clinton was "likable enough," which prompted criticism from Clinton supporters.

But Sanders appeared intent on raising the issue. He took to Twitter to respond, asking his followers, "You can be a moderate. You can be a progressive. But you cannot be a moderate and a progressive."

The attack came from a comment Clinton made at a campaign event in September, when she was describing tax cuts passed under former President George W. Bush and noted that she's occasionally called a moderate. "I plead guilty," she told the crowd in Columbus.

Sanders cited her words in a Wednesday evening news conference in Concord, before noting that she has done some "progressive things" like advocating for children.

"This is not a low blow. There's nothing wrong with people who are moderates. Some of my best friends are moderates," he said. "All I was doing was repeating what she actually said."

Sanders' razor-thin loss in the Iowa caucuses Monday, and his formidable lead in New Hampshire polls, has heightened the possibility that the two remaining Democrats will be involved in a protracted fight for the nomination.

"We are in this until the convention. We are going to win some states, we are going to lose some states," Sanders told reporters on Tuesday. He said the narrow Iowa outcome showed his campaign's ability to take on Clinton's vast political network and address doubts among voters about his electability.

Clinton acknowledged that she has work to do, particularly to convince younger voters to back her bid. In Iowa, Sanders won 84 percent of voters under age 30 and 58 percent of those aged 30-44 according to entrance polls.

"I respect the fact that I have work to do," said Clinton. "They don't have to be for me, I will be for them."

But she stressed her commitment to campaigning in New Hampshire, while acknowledging that Sanders is leading the polls.

Noting that political pundits have questioned whether campaigning in New Hampshire is a good use of her time, Clinton said: "I could not ever skip New Hampshire. I cannot even imagine not being here, not being at settings like this."