RENO, Nev. — Former President Bill Clinton came out swinging against Sen. Bernie Sanders here on Friday, telling supporters that his wife’s rival in the presidential race has been operating “remarkably fact-free.”
“Now, There’s been a lot of passion in this primary, and it’s fine with me— Hillary’s opponent jumped all over me last night, talked about how bad I’d been for African-Americans and poor people,” Clinton said, referring to Thursday night’s MSNBC/Telemundo town hall.
“Let me just say this,” Clinton said, “that campaign has been remarkably fact-free and a lot of the numbers don’t add up.”
Clinton continued to cheers by citing a piece in the New York Times today in which “the nobel prize winning economist Paul Krugman— the most liberal economist writing on a regular basis, who does not work for her, said once again we do not need two parties practicing voodoo economics.”
In his short remarks at a field office, Clinton also criticized Sanders for what he called dismissing critics as “shields of Hillary or part of the establishment,” instead suggesting Sanders doesn’t accept the political realities.
“Progress is hard,” Clinton continued, “and nobody who’s lived through the last seven years believes Obama’s party lost the House in 2010 and lost the Senate in 2014 because it wasn’t left-wing enough.”
“I mean, you know, give me a break,” Clinton said.









