After a summer spent in the fire, Hillary Clinton’s campaign is hoping for some relief this fall.
The former secretary of state’s campaign has already begun a course correction to both better address the controversy over Clinton’s private email server and shore up her position in the race.
In September, they hope to begin to bend the trajectory of the campaign with new policy rollouts and more media appearances. October, meanwhile, promises to be a blockbuster month featuring two critically important events that could set the course for the rest of the campaign: the first Democratic presidential debate on Oct. 13 and Clinton’s testimony before Congress on emails.
Related: Exclusive: Hillary Clinton ‘sorry’ about email confusion
The damage of the summer is clear in a new NBC News/Marist poll, which finds Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders has moved ahead of Clinton by 9 points in the key presidential state of New Hampshire. That’s a drastic change from July, when Clinton was beating Sanders by 10 points.
In Iowa, Clinton still outpaces Sanders, but her lead has fallen from 24 points in July to 11 points now. And Biden finds support with one in five caucus goers at 20%.
“I think the secretary’s people are getting very nervous about the kind of enthusiasm and energy our campaign is bringing forth,” Sanders told reporters in Des Moines Saturday.
Meanwhile, support for Vice President Joe Biden has grown to 16% in New Hampshire and 20% in Iowa, even without him entering the race. The super PAC trying to draft Biden in the 2016 race said the poll showed the “deep desire among Democratic primary voters” for Biden’s entry and hope it could help convince him to enter the race.
This wasn’t supposed to happen to Clinton on her second presidential bid, whose strength had all but frozen out Democratic rivals months ago. “I’ve always thought this was going to be a competitive primary and I welcome that,” Clinton insisted Saturday in New Hampshire.
Aides have long discounted public polls, and note the NBC/Marist poll had Mitt Romney beating Barack Obama at this point in the 2012 cycle.
They say they’re beginning to see the light at the end of the tunnel for the email controversy, which has dogged her campaign and led more Americans to distrust Clinton. But the tunnel is long and there are several major potential cave-ins along the way, from Biden’s entry into the race to an unforeseen escalation in the email probe.
For now, to address the emails, Clinton has begun to change her tone. The first sign came in Iowa 10 days ago when Clinton stopped dismissing and making jokes about her personal email server by saying she should not have done it.
In an interview with NBC News’ Andrea Mitchell Friday, Clinton said she’s “sorry” for the controversy over her private email server, though pointedly refused to apologize for the decision to use the server. “I take responsibility and it wasn’t the best choice,” she said.
Indeed, voters will start to see a lot more of Clinton, with an appearance on Ellen DeGeneres’s talk show Tuesday, a speech on Iran in Washington Wednesday, and likely another media appearance on ABC at the end of the week.
But more than anything else, Clinton’s campaign is counting on her October testimony before the House Select Committee on Benghazi to change the email story. They’re expecting Republicans to overstep and expose the investigation as the partisan witch hunt her allies believe it to be.
Even if all that goes according to plan, the story will linger until at least January, when the state department will release the final batch of her emails.








