The rap group follow The Strokes in showing their support for the Democratic hopeful
12.02.2020 - 18:56 / metroweekly.com
Sen. Bernie Sanders and former Mayor Pete Buttigieg — Photos: Gage Skidmore
Tuesday’s New Hampshire Democratic Primary was almost a bore after the calamitous efforts in Iowa’s caucuses a week prior. Results came in swiftly, there were no noticeable technical hiccups, and when all was said and done, there was a clear winner: Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders.
Sanders ultimately teased out a narrow win after leading comfortably for most of the night, finishing with 25.7% of the vote, just over one
The rap group follow The Strokes in showing their support for the Democratic hopeful
Democratic presidential hopeful Bernie Sanders will be hosting a rally in Los Angeles on Sunday (Mar. 1), and Public Enemy is set to perform. Comedian Sarah Silverman and beloved actor Dick Van Dyke will also take part in the event.
Bernie Sanders scored a resounding victory in Nevada's presidential caucuses on Saturday, cementing his status as the Democrats' national front-runner amid escalating tensions over whether he's too liberal to defeat President Donald Trump. The 78-year-old Vermont senator successfully rallied his fiercely loyal base and tapped into support from Nevada's large Latino community as the Democratic contest moved for the first time into a state with a significant minority population.
After taking home a narrow victory over Sen. Bernie Sanders in the Iowa caucuses, former mayor Pete Buttigieg has come in second behind Sanders in the New Hampshire primaries on Tuesday (February 11).
On Tuesday night, The Conners went live on ABC with two real-time performances — one for the East Coast airing and one for the West Coast — tied to the New Hampshire 2020 Democratic Primary. In both versions of the episode, titled "Live from Lanford," the characters weighed in on the results of the race as they came through on ABC News. However, most members of the family seemed fully unimpressed with the candidates, their ambitions, and the state of politics at large.
By Anita Bennett
By Mike Hitch
Sen. Bernie Sanders will win the New Hampshire primary, according to projections from three broadcast networks, positioning him to claim frontrunner status for the Democratic nomination.
American rock band The Strokes is making its voice heard.
Well that was some interesting television.
By Jill Goldsmith
It’s every rebellious rocker’s dream optic: getting to sing a song complaining about police literally in the face of police taking the stage. That was the scenario as New Hampshire officers took to the Strokes’ stage when fans swarmed the band as they wrapped up an appearance at a Bernie Sanders rally by performing “New York City Cops.”
They did not exercise their right to remain silent.
Joseph Biden’s presidential campaign came out swinging Saturday with a whopper of a TV ad taking a back-handed compliment approach to criticizing Pete Buttigieg.
The Strokes unveiled two tracks from their first album in six years at a New Hampshire political rally in support of U.S. presidential hopeful Bernie Sanders on Monday.
The Strokes played a set at Bernie Sanders’ rally in Durham, New Hampshire Monday night (February 10). During their performance, the band played a brand new song called “Bad Decisions,” premiered the video for “At the Door,” and at the end, Julian Casablancas said, “Album’s coming out April 10.” (Further details of The New Abnormal—and the official “At the Door” video—were unveiled the following morning.) Watch it all happen in the live stream below.