By Jeremy Diamond, CNN
Washington (CNN) Democratic
presidential candidate Bernie Sanders said Sunday that rival Hillary Clinton's
email controversy is a "very serious issue," even though he has
refused to attack the former secretary of state on that front.
Asked Sunday by CNN's Jake
Tapper on "State of the Union" whether voters should interpret his
refusal to engage Clinton on the email issue to mean that Clinton did nothing
wrong, Sanders replied with a firm, "No."
"Nope, nope. That is not,
I think, a fair assessment. That is, I think, a very serious issue,"
Sanders said. "There is a legal process taking place, I do not want to
politicize that issue. It is not my style."
Sanders famously said in the
first Democratic debate that he was tired of hearing about Clinton's "damn
emails," brushing aside one of the biggest issues Republicans have raised
to attack Clinton during the 2016 presidential cycle.
Sanders assessment that
Clinton's use of private email on a private server during her time as secretary
of state is a "very serious issue" comes after the State Department
announced Friday that it was withholding 22 emails determined to be "top
secret" by the intelligence community. The emails were not marked as
classified at the time they were sent.
Sanders also would not address
reports that the Clinton campaign is training its caucus leaders to potentially
throw some support behind long-shot candidate former Maryland Gov. Martin
O'Malley in order to blunt potential Sanders gains as a means of exploiting the
complicated Iowa caucus rules.
"I can't keep up with
what the Clinton campaign does," Sanders said, before instead choosing to
criticize the Clinton campaign over ads suggesting that Sanders attacked
Planned Parenthood -- whom Sanders qualified as the "establishment"
recently despite his decisively pro-abortion rights record in the Senate.
Sanders also pointed to the
huge gains his campaign has made in Iowa, where he is now in a tight race with
Clinton months after starting "50 or 60 points behind" in early
polls.
Sanders said his campaign has
15,000 volunteers barnstorming the state in the final push to Monday's caucuses
and stressed that his campaign has struck a chord with middle class voters
looking to shake up the status quo.
"Our message is resonating,"
he said.
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