



But it wasn’t all fond memories and invitations to Vatican City from the Sanders campaign today - Sanders’ campaign manager accused Clinton’s camp of turning on “a static noise machine” at a donor event in Colorado last night, purportedly with the intent of muting her remarks from the ears of nearby journalists.“All over this state and all over this country, there is a movement developing that says it is too late for establishment politics and establishment economics,” Sanders said. Bernie Sanders was welcomed to his home borough of Brooklyn today, making appearances in the neighborhoods of Flatbush and Greenpoint, including a rally at his childhood home in the morning where he applauded “New York values” of fairness and equality.Also, Clinton may have violated the New York transit authority’s rules in “campaigning” on the subway. Clinton, who mocked rival Bernie Sanders for believing that the subway system still takes tokens, had trouble with her Metrocard (one empathizes) which made her fodder for former presidential candidate Michele Bachmann, who created a helpful instructional video for the former senator. Former secretary of state Hillary Clinton made a trip aboard the New York City subway system yesterday, an act that 5.6 million people perform on an average weekday but which has somehow entered Day Two of the news cycle.Here’s a rundown of the biggest news in today’s campaign - with a certain amount of New York flair: Accordingly, this week’s political news has been, like New York itself, an amalgam of the high- and low-brow, the annoying and the absurd, the sacred and the profane. With the Empire State’s primaries playing a decisive role in the presidential nominating process for the first time in decades, candidates (including two borough-born New Yorkers) are criss-crossing the center of the universe in hopes of winning over its denizens - or, in a few cases, attempting to woo their upstate Rust Belt cousins. Bernie Sanders speaks at a campaign rally in Brooklyn.
