MANCHESTER, New Hampshire – All three Democratic presidential candidates teed off on Donald Trump here at a party event Sunday night — with one invoking “fascism” — and called for action in the wake of Friday’s attack on a Planned Parenthood clinic in Colorado.
While many of their GOP counterparts hesitated to discuss publicly the abortion clinic shooting in Colorado Springs, the Democratic field used the massacre to call for new gun laws and stronger protection of women’s health while campaigning here.
“On Friday there was another mass shooting,” front-runner Hillary Clinton lamented as she spoke to hundreds in a hotel ballroom at the party’s annual Jefferson-Jackson dinner ahead of the state’s critical February 9 contest. “How many more Americans need to die before we take action?”
“We should be supporting Planned Parenthood, not attacking it,” she added.
RELATED: Republican candidates tread lightly on shooting
After mentioning Trump’s name in another context, Clinton referred to his recent apparent support for a database of Muslim Americans. “That’s not who we are and besides, that is not smart law enforcement techniques,” she said. “We cannot give into the fear mongers who say we are at war with Islam.”
Sen. Bernie Sanders deviated from his stump speech to take a moment to discuss the shooting. “I am running for president because in these difficult times against vitriolic Republican rhetoric, we must protect a woman’s right to choose,” Sanders said before leaning into his mic to finish the thought, “and we must defend Planned Parenthood.”
But it was underdog Martin O’Malley, the former governor of Maryland, who had the strongest words on both topics.









