AMY KLOBUCHAR SURGES INTO THIRD PLACE IN NEW HAMPSHIRE

danielboon

TB Fanatic
Sen. Amy Klobuchar in New Hampshire
Senator Amy Klobuchar speaks during a town hall at Nashua Community College on October 25, 2019 in Nashua, New Hampshire.SCOTT EISEN/GETTY IMAGES
In other polls released over the weekend, Klobuchar's position going into the New Hampshire primary tomorrow was less marked, with one poll by CBS News and YouGov putting the Minnesota senator in fifth place on just 10 percent of the New Hampshire Democratic vote.

Another survey released on Sunday by the University of New Hampshire and CNN found the Minnesota senator in fifth place with just 6 percent of the vote, putting her 22 points behind frontrunner Bernie Sanders.

New Hampshire primary polling averages by FiveThirtyEight and Real Clear Politics put Klobuchar in the same spot, with 9.5 and 9.6 percent of the vote respectively.


Pete Buttigieg Closes Gap on Bernie Sanders in New Hampshire: Poll
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But they have also recorded jumps in her polling numbers since the ABC News debate in the Granite State, with both FiveThirtyEight and Real Clear Politics putting her around 1.5 points up on Friday.

While Klobuchar's polling numbers in New Hampshire certainly seem to have improved recently, Emerson College Polling Director Spencer Kimball noted in a release that she "still trails the top two candidates by a significant margin."

As the Democratic primary field stands just a day before New Hampshire voters nominate their favorite candidates, Senator Sanders is leading the pack with 26 percent of the projected vote on average.

He is closely followed by Buttigieg on a little under 21 percent of the vote heading into the Tuesday vote, following possible victory in the controversial Iowa caucus on February 3.

While the Vermont senator was found to have won the popular vote in the Hawkeye state last Monday, Buttigieg had a 0.1 percent lead on state delegate equivalents.

In results released yesterday by the Iowa Democratic Party, Buttigieg was said to have won with two more national delegates than Sanders.

However the long delayed results have faced contest, with Senator Sanders' team reportedly seeking a partial recanvass ahead of a Monday deadline as several news outlets are holding back from calling victory in the state over questions about the accuracy of results.

 

The Hammer

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Boy, if Biden drops to fifth or worse in NH, he's going to have to be kept from sharp objects and things he can throw...
 

danielboon

TB Fanatic
Amy Klobuchar's New Hampshire Surge Might Really Be Happening Big Amy Energy? Picture of Molly Hensley-Clancy Molly Hensley-ClancyBuzzFeed News Reporter
Posted on February 10, 2020, at 11:13 a.m. ET
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    NASHUA, New Hampshire — It might actually be happening this time. And Amy Klobuchar knows it.
    “We are surging!” she cried to a crowd of more than 1,100 on Sunday — her biggest crowd of the primary season, packed into a middle school gym and waving small American flags.
    Pundits have been predicting the moderate Minnesota senator’s rise in the Democratic primary since October, as she racked up supposed debate wins and endorsements and built a campaign on her own “electability” in the states Democrats desperately need in 2020. For months, though, there was little sign among voters of that surge. Polls remained stagnant, and small, quiet crowds often tailed her in Iowa.
    But this time, after the latest Democratic debate and just before New Hampshire votes in the nation’s first primary, there’s serious evidence that the Klobuchar is becoming a threat to the other moderates in the race: record-sized crowds, impressive fundraising hauls, and polls that suddenly show her in third place, ahead of Elizabeth Warren and Joe Biden.
    Her delight at this fact, at a succession of diners and packed rallies across New Hampshire, is palpable.
    “And by the way, I’ve got a plan for the Midwest — and we can include New Hampshire as well,” Klobuchar told Sunday’s middle school gym crowd. “We’re going to build a beautiful blue wall around these states, and we’re going to make Donald Trump pay for it.”
    Not much has changed with Klobuchar herself. Her politics are still moderate, Midwestern, and pragmatic, her jokes still corny, her speeches filled with riffs about infrastructure. Her mentions of Minnesota, Minnesota politics, and snowstorms are still something close to compulsive.
    One thing that is different: the complicated aftermath of the Iowa caucuses. Biden finished in fourth place, just barely ahead of Klobuchar, leaving his supporters skittish and his path to the Democratic nomination in doubt. Pete Buttigieg — who finished in the top two with Bernie Sanders — is, for now, the leading moderate candidate; his biggest weakness, his political inexperience, is something Klobuchar has repeatedly and skillfully criticized in debates.
    Polls in New Hampshire now have Klobuchar neck-and-neck with Warren and Biden. In 48 hours after Friday night’s debate — where she made waves by attacking everything from Medicare for All (“It is not real, Bernie”) to Pete Buttigieg (“We have a newcomer in the White House, and look where it got us”) — Klobuchar raised $3 million, three times what she raised in the two days after she launched her campaign a year ago.
    She broke her crowd-size record in New Hampshire Friday, drawing 700 people in Manchester, and then broke it again hours later in Nashua.
    “She’s awesome,” said Patty McKeon, a homemaker in Bedford, New Hampshire, who came to see Klobuchar in Nashua. “She knows what she wants to do, and she has a way she’s going to do it. She’s not just talking.”
    Anne Dowling, a retiree who lives in Canterbury, had just been to Klobuchar’s event Sunday after seeing Warren. She liked the Massachusetts senator, she said. But she thought Warren’s politics were ultimately unrealistic. Klobuchar “has the details right.”
    “The best point Warren made today was, ‘It’s not a time to be wishy-washy,’” Dowling said. “But it’s also not a time to give the other side fodder. Partly, it’s a gut thing. I like Amy.”
    If Klobuchar finishes third or even fourth place in the New Hampshire primary Tuesday, it would likely have serious consequences for other Democrats. Not just Biden and Warren, who she could beat, but Buttigieg, too. If she eats away at his voters — many of them moderates looking for electability and party unity, some looking for a Biden escape route — she could cost him a badly needed victory in New Hampshire, before the race moves to the less Buttigieg-favorable states of Nevada and South Carolina.
    The one Democrat who isn’t likely to lament her rise in the state: Bernie Sanders, who is not competing for the same voters and is watching his closest competition scramble among themselves.
    Klobuchar still has virtually no path to the Democratic nomination, though that could potentially change after New Hampshire. She has concentrated most of her campaign’s operations in the country’s two early states, and she was outraised in the last fundraising quarter by even Andrew Yang.
    Most critically, Klobuchar, a former tough-on-crime prosecutor, has 0% support from black voters, according to polls — a key part of the Democratic base.
    The word “momentum,” when used to describe Klobuchar, has become something of a constant in the Democratic primary in recent months. There was Klobuchar trying to “turn her debate spotlight into momentum” in October and declaring her “momentum says we are doing pretty damn well in Iowa” in November. She was “quietly gaining momentum” on Dec. 4, “riding debate momentum” in late December, and “gaining momentum” in early January.
    She did pull within striking distance of Joe Biden in Iowa. But Iowa, which borders her home state of Minnesota, was supposed to be Klobuchar’s launch pad; she was the only major candidate to visit all of its 99 counties.

    Christina Freundlich (@christinafreund) | Twitter



    Part of that struggle to break through in Iowa at the end was because of Donald Trump’s impeachment trial, which kept her off of the campaign trail in the last two weeks before the caucuses.
    In January, when she appeared before a small, subdued crowd of some 150 people in Waukee, Iowa, in the midst of the trial, Klobuchar appeared exhausted and frustrated with the situation she had found herself in. She had just two days in Iowa before she would be forced to return to Washington.
    She wished she could be in Iowa, she told the crowd: “I would like nothing more."
    And she was going to have to make a detour to South Carolina the next morning, Martin Luther King Day, something she had initially not planned. She’d been forced to make a schedule change after facing sharp criticism from black leaders in the heavily African American early-voting state.
    “Long story,” she told Iowa voters of her South Carolina trip.
    Klobuchar’s speech was subdued, with few big applause lines and a number of missed one-liners.
    She was a markedly different candidate this weekend in New Hampshire, promising to roars of applause to “restore decency to our politics and decency to the White House.” Her speech was, at times, breathless with excitement. Several lines prompted chants of, “AMY! AMY!”
    “For a lot of us, this is a decency check,” she said. “This is a patriotism check on this president. And it is the simple notion that the heart of America is so much bigger than the heart of this guy in the White House.”
    When a joke missed, prompting a single laugh in the enormous crowd, she wasn’t fazed. “Thank you, one person,” she quipped.
    “I have been bolted down on my desk in the Senate,” Klobuchar told a crowd in Salem on Sunday. “And I am finally unleashed.”

 

WalknTrot

Veteran Member
Supposedly she made a good showing in the last debate. So many people aren't gonna vote for Buttigeig(sp?) - gay (yeah...its a factor), inexperience, massive pandering to the Socialists. Biden is looking more and more addled every day. Bernie will always get his crazy-town 20-ish % and not much more. Bloomberg is just simply not a factor.

S. Carolina will be interesting. Black vote and southern vote. If Klobuchar suddenly turns into the "fair-haired child" of the Clintons and the DNC, look out.
 

danielboon

TB Fanatic
What's wrong with Amy Klobuchar?
Politico reported that Klobuchar was one of the "worst bosses in Congress", with an annual staff turnover rate between 2011 and 2016 of 36%, the highest of any senator. A Vanity Fair article alleged she had a reputation for cruelty and emotional abuse.
 

Meemur

Voice on the Prairie / FJB!
I know Amy Klobuchar is not a nice person, but she can come across on camera as a "tough mom," which I believe is responsible for her current rise in the polls.

That and ANYONE is better than Biden at this point. That clown has shot himself in the foot with his latest series of gaffs.
 

beDplorable

Senior Member

Amy Klobuchar: The Senator from Cargill, Inc.
Posted at 12:30 pm on January 28, 2020 by Stu Cvrk
[snip]
Thankfully, independent investigators have been doing what the Democrat-run legacy media refuse to do. Peter Schweizer’s new book, Profiles in Corruption, contains a devastating chapter on Amy Klobuchar. He lays out a well-sourced case that Klobuchar isn’t what she claims to be: a tough anti-crime and anti-corruption prosecutor who is a “progressive” and champion of “average Americans.” To the contrary, he makes a strong case that her prosecutorial record as chief prosecutor of Hennepin County (the most populous Minnesota county that encompasses most of Minneapolis) was to “punch down by throwing the book at smaller fish, while avoiding prosecutions of larger and more serious criminal operators.” And those big fish were often donors to her various campaigns. Here is one example from Schweizer’s book:
[T]he largest financial fraud by far in her jurisdiction involved a massive conspiracy that she never even appeared to investigate. It involved the second-largest Ponzi scheme in American history to date (surpassed only by Bernie Madoff0. It involved billions of dollars, dummy corporations, and an elaborate scheme that ripped off investors for hundreds of millions of dollars. The man at the center of it, however, happened to be in business with [Klobuchar’s main political supporters,] the Mondales, was a Klobuchar friend, and one of her largest financial backers. Indeed, Petters Group International (PGI) would prove to be her single largest campaign donor when she ran for the Senate in 2006.
Just weeks after she announced her candidacy in February 2005, Petters and thirteen employees in his companies all gave her contributions in a single day (March 31, 2005). By the quarterly report released right before the 2006 election, they were her largest contributor by far – donating $71,600 or 32 percent more than her second largest donor, her old law firm. By the end of 2006, Petters Group Worldwide had contributed more than $120,000 toward her successful bid.
In his book, Schweizer goes on to detail Klobuchar’s relationship with Tom Petters and how the scandal unfolded, including Klobuchar’s calling of Petters days after his house was raided as the scandal broke in September 2008 (strangely, Minnesota’s other senator at the time, Norm Coleman, did not call him).

Klobuchar has frequently labeled herself as a “progressive,” but I wonder how many real progressives and “little people” know about her shaking down big companies for campaign contributions in exchange for earmarks? Here is how Schweizer described how she operated as a US senator:
Part of her strategy was using her legislative agenda as a means of extracting donations from powerful corporations who wanted work done on Capitol. One of those techniques included the effective use of earmarks for her campaign funders.

According to Open Secrets, she sponsored or cosponsored 103 earmarks totaling more than $200 million in fiscal year 2008, her first full year in the Senate. (That put her near the top third in the U.S. Senate for earmarks.) She had another eight-eight earmarks totaling more than $133 million in fiscal year 2009. In the last year that members of Congress could officially use earmarks, she had eight-eight earmarks in excess of $117 million (fiscal year 2010).
Earmarks aren’t “progressive policies,” Amy. They are set-asides of taxpayer dollars for campaign contributors – pay for play in action. Progressives might call that “corporate capitalism.” Here are just two examples of large contributors whom she shook down in one of her “earmarks-for-campaign contributions” efforts:

  • Her old lawfirm, Dorsey and Whitney, who cashed in on supporting contracts for developing the multi-million dollar Northstar light-rail project funded by earmarks
  • The Pohlads, billionaire bankers and owners of the Minnesota Twins, who benefited from the rail project
There seems to be no large donor who couldn’t buy a piece of Klobuchar for campaign contributions. The rest of the chapter details entity after entity gaining regulatory advantage, earmarks, carveouts in federal regulations, and other benefits after having made significant campaign contributions to Klobuchar. The amount of corporate cash flow to a supposedly “progressive” Democrat senator really surprised me.

Schweizer finished up the Klobuchar chapter with the favors she did for Minnesota-based Cargill, Inc., a giant food processor in the Midwest, and one of her top donors these days. Among other “goodwill,” she supported carveouts in financial regulations to allow Cargill to continue to leverage and exploit derivatives (very important for a commodities-producing company). Hence, my new name for Amy Klobuchar: the Senator from Cargill, Inc.

The woman is not what she advertises herself to be and deserves much more scrutiny than she has been subjected to for someone endorsed for the Democrat nomination by the NY Times. One would think that average Democrat primary voters would want to know a lot more about Klobuchar before canvassing or voting for her, including the details described in Schweizer’s excellent book.
 

beDplorable

Senior Member

Amy Klobuchar: 2020 Democratic presidential candidate shares her views on current issues
USA TODAY

We asked presidential candidates questions about a variety of issues facing the country. This is what Democratic candidate Amy Klobuchar had to say about climate change, gun control, health care and other issues.
Do you believe the earth’s climate is changing? If yes, do you believe it is caused by humans?
Senator Klobuchar believes that there is now a scientific consensus that climate change is having an impact on our world and it is clear that inaction is not an option for our economy, for our environment, for our country, and for our world. 2018 was the fourth-hottest year on record globally, and another near-record year for U.S. weather and climate disasters. Senator Klobuchar believes that human activity has caused climate change and she has voted for legislation affirming that human activity has contributed to climate change.
If you could unilaterally make one change, or enact one policy, that would affect the climate, what would that be? And why?
Senator Klobuchar understands that no single policy will solve the climate crisis. That’s why she supports a carbon pricing system that does not have a regressive impact on Americans and she is committed to taking immediate action — without Congress — to get us back into the International Climate Change Agreement, bring back the clean power rules and gas mileage standards that the Obama Administration put into place, and put forward sweeping legislation that provides a landmark investment in clean-energy jobs and infrastructure, promotes rural renewable energy, and supports workers and communities that are on the front lines of the climate crisis.
How would you engage foreign leaders to work with the United States on issues related to climate?
By withdrawing from the International Climate Change Agreement, President Trump squandered America’s climate leadership and limited U.S. leverage to address carbon emissions abroad. Senator Klobuchar believes we must rebuild our relationship with our allies and restore America’s standing in the world. As president, Senator Klobuchar will reassert U.S. global leadership to confront the climate crisis. She will get the United States back in the International Climate Change Agreement on day one, build on the agreement to achieve global emissions reductions, and establish meaningful enforcement of international climate goals.

Read what all the candidates have to say about climate change here.
Should the U.S. explore additional use of nuclear power as an alternative energy source? Why or why not?
Senator Klobuchar would review all the existing nuclear plants to make sure they are safe and she will not expand nuclear power unless we can find a safe storage solution for nuclear waste.
Should the U.S. government offer subsidies for renewable energy, such as wind energy or ethanol? Why or why not?
Senator Klobuchar’s plan to tackle the climate crisis puts our country on a path to achieving 100% net-zero emissions no later than 2050, which will require a wholesale transformation of the energy sector. As president, Senator Klobuchar will support subsidies and tax credits for renewable energy. She will also do more to accelerate the adoption of clean energy, including by subsidizing production and investment by state and local governments, nonprofits and private companies.
Read what all the candidates have said about energy and technology here.
How would you address gun violence in America?

Gun violence has cut short far too many lives, torn families apart, and plagued communities across the country. As president, Senator Klobuchar will never fold to the NRA and gun safety will be a top priority. She’ll introduce legislation including putting universal background checks in place, closing the Charleston loophole, and banning bump stocks, assault weapons and high-capacity magazines. There are also important steps the president can take without waiting for Congress, including closing the “boyfriend loophole,” investing in research into gun violence, and restoring rules to prevent those with severe mental illnesses from acquiring guns.
Read what all the candidates have to say about gun violence here.
How do you propose making schools safer from acts of violence?
Senator Klobuchar led bipartisan legislation that was signed into law that provided more than $1 billion to improve school security and training for teachers and law enforcement, while ensuring that this federal funding could not be used to arm teachers. As president, she will continue to push for funding for school safety and training and she will champion a package of gun safety legislation that includes providing grants to states to implement extreme risk provisions to empower families and law enforcement to keep guns away from people who show signs of threatening behavior. As part of her 100 days plan, she has committed to preventing any federal funding from being used to arm teachers.
What role, if any, should the government have in regulating large technology companies?
Senator Klobuchar believes our laws and our policies have not kept pace with our changing economy. As president, she will take aggressive antitrust action and stand up to multi-billion and trillion dollar companies, including technology companies. She leads legislation to modernize antitrust enforcement and update the legal standards to stop harmful consolidation. She has also introduced bipartisan privacy legislation to improve transparency and strengthen consumers’ recourse options when a breach of data occurs. She will also promote accountability and transparency for political ads on the internet by passing and signing into law her bipartisan Honest Ads Act.
If you are elected, how would you interact with North Korea? What relationship would the U.S. and North Korea have?
Senator Klobuchar believes we need to work with our allies to make clear to Kim Jong Un that further development of North Korea’s nuclear and missile programs will only lead to further economic sanctions and diplomatic isolation. At the same time, she would be prepared to offer incentives for positive actions, but these must be tied directly to verifiable and irreversible steps toward denuclearization.
Would you re-enter the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran? Why or why not?
Senator Klobuchar believes that we cannot allow Iran to acquire a nuclear weapon. As president, Senator Klobuchar will renegotiate back into the Iran nuclear agreement.
A visual guide to the 2020 candidates’ views on health careHow the presidential candidates plan to take on climate change: A visual guideHow the 2020 presidential candidates would handle gun violence
How do you plan to address the threat of extremism in the U.S.?
Senator Klobuchar believes the most important responsibility of our government is keeping our nation and our people safe. That means strong counterterrorism and intelligence capabilities, promoting community engagement to address threats and violence, developing new technologies to detect and prevent attacks, and supporting our local, state and federal law enforcement. She would also prioritize combating domestic terrorism and empower law enforcement to investigate and prosecute perpetrators of hate-motivated violence, including against minorities, people of color, immigrants, and the LGBTQ community.
Do you believe there is equal access to voting in the U.S.? If not, how would you go about expanding access to voting?
Senator Klobuchar believes that there are insidious forces working to take away people’s right to vote and we must do more to stand up to those who would suppress the vote with intimidation, repress our voices with dark money, and refuse to address foreign attacks on our elections. As president, Senator Klobuchar will champion a voting rights and democracy reform package, including automatically registering every 18-year-old in this country to vote, banning states from purging voters from rolls for not voting in recent elections, putting same-day registration policies in place, restoring the Voting Rights Act, and passing a constitutional amendment to overturn Citizens United.
Do you believe voter fraud is a problem in the U.S.? If yes, how do you plan to you address it?
Senator Klobuchar believes there is no evidence of widespread voter fraud and was one of the Senators who led the successful effort to dissolve the so-called Presidential Advisory Commission on Election Integrity, which she called “a commission in search of a problem.” At the same time, Senator Klobuchar has led the effort to expand voting rights and secure our elections from foreign interference, including by introducing legislation to protect our elections with backup paper ballots, election audits, and accountability for political ads on the internet.
Should it be a crime to enter the U.S. illegally?
Senator Klobuchar would immediately end the policy of family separation and she would change enforcement priorities so that criminal penalties are reserved for those who threaten the safety and security of our country.
Read what all the candidates have to say about immigration here.
Should the U.S. expand or limit legal immigration?
Senator Klobuchar supports an increase of current levels of legal immigration as part of comprehensive immigration reform.
In many areas of the country, there is a critical shortage of affordable housing. What would your administration do to address it?
Senator Klobuchar believes we must make housing more affordable for all Americans. That’s why she has released a bold plan to expand affordable housing opportunities in rural and urban areas, increase access to justice, take on discrimination in housing, revitalize neglected neighborhoods, and increase access to homeownership. To help families pay for rent, she will make housing vouchers available to all qualifying households with children.
Read what all the candidates have to say about education, housing and jobs here.
What is your plan to address the growing national debt?
Senator Klobuchar believes we need to get serious about tackling the debt to put our country back on sound fiscal footing. As president, she will put in place a long-term plan to responsibly reduce the deficit with a balanced approach that includes both spending reductions and revenue increases by increasing taxes on the wealthiest Americans. In less than three years, President Trump has added $4 trillion to the national debt. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimates that by 2029, the national debt will be higher than it was right after World War II. As President, Senator Klobuchar will work to tackle the debt and repeal the regressive parts of the Republican tax bill, which was projected to add over $1 trillion to the debt.
Do you think our national debt is a national security issue? Why or why not?
Senator Klobuchar believes that getting the national debt under control is an urgent priority and that doing so will make the United States stronger economically and on the world stage
Read what all the candidates have to say about the economy here.
Is capitalism the best economic structure for the United States? If yes, why? If no, what is better and how do you believe it will benefit Americans?
Senator Klobuchar worked in the private sector for 14 years and believes in capitalism. She also believes we need to have checks on the private sector including a strong safety net, antitrust laws, and consumer protections.
In many parts of the country, there is a skilled worker gap. How would you close that gap to get more people employed in the industries that need them?
Senator Klobuchar has been a strong advocate for supporting workers in the 21st century economy and connecting them to jobs. She will make sure that students — and our workers — are prepared for in-demand occupations by encouraging STEM education, providing tuition-free one- and two-year community college degrees and technical certifications and expanding student loan forgiveness programs to workers in in-demand occupations. She has also committed to expanding apprenticeship opportunities and benefits with the goal of doubling the number of apprenticeships to over a million by the end of her first term.
Related: 2020 candidates on the issues
Should the government forgive student loans? If yes, why and for whom? If no, why not?
As president, Senator Klobuchar will work so that students can refinance their loan debt at lower interest rates, she will fix and strengthen the public service loan forgiveness program, and she will expand loan forgiveness for in-demand occupations. She also believes we must make college more affordable and supports a major expansion of Pell Grants and higher-education tax credits so we can help students and their families with the cost of higher education. She believes that all students who attended for-profit schools that defrauded students should be eligible for loan forgiveness.
Should community college be free to anyone who wants to attend? Should other colleges and universities be free to attend?
Senator Klobuchar is focused on connecting students — and our workers — to the jobs that are available today. She supports tuition-free one- and two-year community college degrees and technical certifications and targeting assistance for four-year degrees to the families and students that need the assistance. As president, Senator Klobuchar would work to double the maximum Pell Grant and expand eligibility to families making up to $100,000 a year.
Is more funding needed for mental health care in America? If yes, what amount and how should it be allocated? Where should that money come from?
Senator Klobuchar released a $100 billion plan to combat substance use disorders and prioritize mental health, including expanding access to treatment, launching new suicide prevention initiatives, and enforcing mental health parity laws. To pay for her plan, she will hold opioid manufacturers responsible for their role in the opioid crisis, including by placing a 2 cent fee on each milligram of active opioid ingredient in a prescription pain pill and crafting a federal Master Settlement Agreement that provides money directly to the states for the cost of addiction treatment and social services.
Read what all the candidates have to say about health care here.
How would you address rising prescription drug costs, specifically for medications that are necessary for people to live, such as insulin and mental health medications?
Senator Klobuchar believes that when people are sick, their focus should be on getting better, rather than on how they can afford their prescriptions. Yet drug prices are an increasing burden across our country. That’s why she has been a champion when it comes to tackling the high costs of prescription drugs. She has authored proposals to lift the ban on Medicare negotiations for prescription drugs, allow personal importation of safe drugs from countries like Canada, and stop pharmaceutical companies from blocking less-expensive generics.
What do you believe is the biggest health care issue facing Americans? How would you solve it?
Senator Klobuchar believes that we must bring down costs to make health care affordable for all Americans. She will improve the Affordable Care Act and help bring down costs for consumers by putting a non-profit public option in place, expanding premium subsidies and providing cost-sharing reductions to lower out-of-pocket health care costs like copays and deductibles. She will also tackle the skyrocketing cost of prescription drugs, including by lifting the ban on Medicare negotiations for prescription drugs, allowing personal importation of safe drugs from countries like Canada and stopping pharmaceutical companies from blocking less-expensive generics.
How would you address the opioid crisis?
Senator Klobuchar’s dad struggled with alcoholism and she saw the toll that substance use disorders can take on families and communities. That’s why she was the first candidate to release a mental health and addiction plan. Her plan launches new prevention and early intervention initiatives, expands access to treatment, gives Americans a path to sustainable recovery, and invests in research into pain alternatives to opioids. To pay for her plan, Senator Klobuchar will hold opioid manufacturers responsible for their role in the opioid crisis.
Should marijuana be legalized federally for medicinal use? Should it be legalized for recreational use?
Senator Klobuchar supports legalizing marijuana.
Do you support a public health insurance option for all Americans? If yes, do you support the elimination of private health care in favor of a government-run plan, or do you support an option where Americans can choose a public or private plan? If no, why?
Senator Klobuchar supports bringing down the cost of health care for everyone by putting a non-profit public option in place that allows people to buy into affordable health insurance coverage through Medicare or Medicaid. She does not support kicking 149 million Americans off their current insurance in four years.
Should the federal government re-institute the death penalty? If yes, for what crimes?
Senator Klobuchar has opposed the death penalty from back in her time as the County Attorney. The evidence shows that the death penalty does not reduce crime, it is costly and it is discriminatory.
 
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