Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Clinton gave her response to Tuesday Night’s GOP date before it even began.
Her campaign said almost nothing during the debate, but in a speech on ISIS and foreign policy in Minnesota just hours before the candidates took the stage in Las Vegas, Clinton sought to portray herself as the only grownup in the race capable of being commander-in-chief.
The former secretary of state laid out what her campaign later touted as “serious” and “sophisticated” policy proposals, while suggesting that her potential Republican rivals have nothing more to offer on national security than schoolyard taunts and chicken-hawk chest thumping. “Shallow slogans don’t add up to a strategy,” she said. “Bluster and bigotry are not credentials for becoming commander-in-chief.”
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It was the third speech on ISIS Clinton had given in a month, underscoring how important her campaign believes the issue to be. Clinton has sought to portray herself as resolute while Republicans are fearful in the face of terrorism, and she has drawn on her experience.
On Tuesday, she specifically pre-empted talking points she expected to hear from individual candidates. On Sen. Ted Cruz’s call to carpet bomb ISIS, she said, “Promising to carpet bomb until the desert glows doesn’t make you sound strong – it makes you sound like you’re in over your head.”
On Sen. Marco Rubio’s view that the struggle between the West and ISIS is a clash of civilizations, she said, “this is not a clash of civilizations — It’s a clash between civilization and barbarism.”
At times during the debate, Republicans aided Clinton’s work.
Donald Trump seemed flummoxed by a question on the “nuclear triad” – strategic bombers, nuclear missiles and submarines – leading many observers to believe the billionaire had never heard the term before.
The pro-Clinton super PAC Correct the Record, which coordinates directly with the official Clinton campaign, pointed out one flaw with New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie’s plan to work closer with King Hussein of Jordan – the king has been dead for 16 years.
But it was Trump who drew special attention. He was the only candidate Clinton mentioned by name in her speech, and pro-Clinton forces worked hard to remind reporters that all the candidates on stage have said they would support the Trump campaign if he were the GOP nominee.
“The other candidates look to Trump and follow his lead. They’ve seen that fear equals votes, and every last one wants a part of that spotlight,” said Correct the Record’s Adrienne Watson.








