thousands met every on

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like the two-million member Service Employees nang mui uy tin chat luong International Union, are not part of the federation.) Exit and entrance polls from the Iowa and Nevada caucuses showed voters from union households favoring Mrs. Clinton over Mrs. Sanders by a roughly 10-point margin — greater than the margin by which Mrs. Clinton won those contests overall. Still, that 10-point margin — assuming it is correct, which is not necessarily assured — may reflect a narrowing of the gap between the two candidates among union members since last fall. In the three polls that Afscme conducted between last May and October, more than 60 percent of its Democratic members consistently backed Mrs. Clinton, versus no more than 20 percent who backed Mr. Sanders. It is impossible to know nang mui o dau dep an toan the margins by which members of specific unions voted for Mrs. Clinton in this year’s early primary contests, but other evidence suggests significant pockets of support for Mr. Sanders. The Afscme council in Washington State endorsed him in January, and a prominent service employees union local in New Hampshire endorsed him in November. mp said he wanted to punch a protester, who had been ejected from the event, in the face. On the eve of what could be Mr. Trump’s third nâng mũi cho nam giới consecutive victory among a fractured Republican presidential field, the protester — the third one to interrupt him at the event and who Mr. Trump said had d his supporters about the importance of “voting” — he said he hated the word “caucusing” — and told them that they should go into Tuesday night expecting a tie, to help energize them. But he also issued a warning to them: “Don’t make me have a miserable evening.” Mr. Trump, leading in the number of delegates tắm trắng an toàn tại cần thơ and states won in the nominating contest, also turned his attention to the general election, saying he would be aggressive against Hillary Clinton and repeatedly raising the specter of her email scandal. thrown punches at security guards — really drew the candidate’s ire. As the man was being escorted away, Mr. Trump repeatedly told the crowd that he wished for the “old days,” adding, “You know what they used to do to guys like that when they were in a place like this? They’d be carried out on a stretcher.” “I’d like to punch him in the face, I’ll tell ya,” Mr. Trump added. Mr. Trump has faced criticism over his response tam trang an toan o can tho to protesters before. After a Black Lives Matter demonstrator was pushed to the ground at one of his events in November, Mr. Trump said in an interview after the episode that “maybe he should have been roughed up,” before later pulling back from his comments. But on Monday night, he held nothing back, and the crowd of thousands met every one of his lines with whooping cheers. Addressing another protester, a man holding a sign that read, “Veterans to Trump: End Hate Speech Against Muslims,” Mr. Trump repeatedly said, “Get him the hell out,” as the crowd booed the man’s exit. But Mr. Trump didn’t limit his rough talk to the protesters. Referring to the Iranians who took 10 Navy sailors hostage in January, Mr. Trump said the leader of the Iranians was a “rough Ms. Weingarten suggested that some of the tam trang an toan khong bat nang blame for confusion about the level of labor support for Mrs. Clinton resided with the A.F.L.-C.I.O., which she said had given the impression that a Clinton endorsement might be imminent in the run-up to this week’s meeting, and to a similar meeting last summer. She pointed out that many unions were increasingly forming ad hoc alliances outside the federation to work on key issues, like pensions and the ability of unions to collect fees from nonmembers. “The traditional role the A.F.L. is supposed to have is marshaling all this energy, and they’re not doing it, we’re doing it ourselves,” she said. “This in some ways is just more of that. Frankly I’m surprised the A.F.L. put itself in position, both in July and now, where they were creating an expectation