Labels

#SandraBland #SayHerName AFL-CIO African-Americans Anderson Cooper Arizona Atlanta Benjamin Dixon Show Bernie Dolls Bernie is Unelectable Bernie Music Bernie Sanders Quiz Bernie2016TV Bill de Blasio Bill Maher Birthday Black Lives Matter Boston Brunch with Bernie California Campaign Coverage Campaign Finance Reform Campaign Manager Campaign Photography Campaign Rally CampaignZero Campus Sexual Assault Bill Capitalism Cartoons Celebrity Endorsements Charlie Rose Chicago Climate Change Clinton/Obama Debate Highlights CNN College Tuition Colorado Comic Book Congressional Black Caucus Cornel West Cost of Proposals Criminal Justice Daniel Craig Danny Devito David Pakman Show DC Rally Death Penalty Debate Debates Democratic Socialism Deray DNC DOMA Donna Brazile Dreamers Drug Costs Economic Injustice Economic Justice Ed Schultz Elizabeth Warren En Espanol Endorsements Enough is Enough DC Rally Environment Evangelicals Events Exxon Face the Nation Fact Checking Flashback Friday Folk Album For-Profit Prisons Foreign Policy Full Interview Fundraising Global Warming Grassroots for Bernie Rally Gun Control Headlines Hillary Clinton Immigration Reform Indiana Infrastructure Plan Interview Iowa Iowa State Fair Iowa Straw Poll Iraq War Jeff Weaver Jefferson-Jackson Dinner Jesse Jackson Jesse Ventura Joe Biden Keep Hope Alive Keystone Pipeline Killer Mike Koch Brothers Labor Unions Larry Wilmore Las Vegas Latinos Laura Flanders Show LGBT Issues Liberty University Lil B Los Angeles Rally Maine Marcus Ferrell Marijuana Mark Ruffalo Mass Incarceration Media Meet the Press Mia Farrow Michael Eric Dyson Military Millenials MSNBC Music Video Monday NAACP National Security Nevada New Hampshire New Yorker Newswatch North Carolina Oil Companies Podcast Politics Nation Polls Pope Francis Prison Industry Profile Propaganda Puerto Rico Rachel Maddow Racial Justice Racism Rally Real People for Bernie Sanders Reddit Reno Republicans for Bernie Richard Wolff Ryan Lizza Sanders Staff Sarah Silverman SC Democratic Forum Senator Sanders Unfiltered Sexism SNL Soapbox Social Security Socialism South Carolina Speech Stephen Colbert Student Town Hall Sunday Funnies Susan Sarandon Symone D. Sanders Ta-Nehisi Coates Take Me To Church Talib Kweli Taxes Teamsters Tony Tig Town Hall Meeting TPP Trade Trump Tucson TV Ad Universal Healthcare Virginia Voting Rights Act Wall Street Wing Ding Dinner Wisconsin Women's Issues
Showing posts with label Debates. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Debates. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Todays Headlines: Wednesday October 14, 2015 Post-Debate Coverage

Press Release: Sanders Scores Big Win in the First Democratic Debate 

CNN: Sanders Wins Facebook Poll

Fusion: Sanders Wins Fusion Focus Group

Fox: Sanders Wins Frank Luntz Focus Group

CNN: First Post Debate Interview by Chris Cuomo 

MSNBC: Chris Matthews Interviews Bernie Sanders, Thinks He Won Debate

Daily Kos-Shaun King: It's Clear That Black Lives Matter 2 Bernie Sanders 

Twitter: CNN Deleted Poll Showing Sanders Winning with 80% (image)

New Yorker: In Serious Gaffe Sanders Treats Opponent with Dignity and Respect (satire)

Bloomberg: How Sanders Raised 1.3 Million $ in 4 Hours

The Hill: Why Bernie Sanders Dominated the Debate

Chicago Tribune: Sanders Authenticity Wins the Debate

Washington Post: Sanders Breaks Through

Inquistr: Sanders Sees Post Debate Surge

Vox: Sanders Adds 35K New Facebook Followers Post Debate

The Atlantic: Sanders and Clinton Both Won in the Way They Needed To

Salon: Greed is Not Good, The Mainstreaming of Socialist Ideas


Sanders' Scores Big Win in First Democratic Debate (Press Release)

LAS VEGAS – Bernie Sanders won a major victory in Tuesday night’s first Democratic debate, according to polls, focus groups, media experts, independent analysts and social media analytics.
On CNN, which sponsored the debate, a majority in a post-debate focus group said Sanders was the victor. The Vermont senator was the most popular candidate among a group of young registered Democrats in a Fusion focus group. “Bernie was on fire the whole night,” according to a 24-year-old named Chauncey who told Fusion he went into the debate undecided. And on Fox News, pollster Frank Luntz talked to Democratic voters in Florida who called him “strong” and “straightforward” and “powerful.”
More than one hour after the debate ended, in a Time magazine online poll, 68 percent said Sanders won. Clinton was in second place with 16 percent. A U.S. News & World Report poll had Sanders the clear victor with 84 percent of the vote. Seventy-four percent of Slate readers said Sanders won.
In the mainstream media, the headline on a Chicago Tribune editorial was: Bernie Sanders’ night: Authenticity wins the Democratic debate. Salon’s Colin McEnroe wrote: This was Bernie Sanders’ night: The candidate of anger and honesty won the Democratic debate. Forbes said Bernie Sanders Clearly Won The Democratic Debate — On Twitter.
On social media, where Sanders’ grassroots revolution began, there were more Google searches for Sanders than for any other candidate. He was the most retweeted candidate of the night, according to Twitter. He gained more followers on Twitter than any other candidate and Twitter said people talked about Sanders more than any other candidate online.
Facebook said Sanders had the “biggest social moment” of the debate. Twitter agreed. Both said online interest peaked when Sanders said relentless news media focus on former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s emails were a distraction from more important issues. “What the Secretary said is right. And that is the American people are tired of hearing about your damn emails,” Sanders said. Instead, he added, this campaign should be about the grotesque levels of income and wealth inequality in our country, the unprecedented planetary emergency of our changing climate, and our need to invest in jobs and education, not jails and incarceration.
Online, BernieSanders.com broke our own record for the website’s biggest day ever. Offline, the campaign had helped organize more than 4,000 debate-watch parties attended by more than 100,000 people in homes, union halls, bars and college campuses from coast to coast.
The campaign also experienced a fundraising bonanza. More than $1.3 million was raised in the first four hours after the debate began. There were more than 37,600 individual contributions. The average donation during that four-hour stretch was $34.58. There was about $100,000 in the five minutes after the debate ended. At the peak, there were 10.25 contributions per second.
Sanders shared the stage with the former secretary of state, former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley, former U.S. Sen. Jim Webb of Virginia and Lincoln Chafee, the former governor and U.S. senator from Rhode Island.