Bernie Sanders Starts to Name Names to Set Himself Apart From Hillary Clinton

Just minutes into a recent speech, he said her name.

But it was not just the setting that was unusual for Sanders, something had changed in his remarks too. Just minutes into his speech, he said her name.

“Let me tell you a word about Social Security. I understand Secretary Clinton was here the other day. I think she and I have a strong disagreement on this,” he began, going on to talk about his proposal for maintaining and expanding Social Security by “scrapping the cap” on taxable income. By comparison, Clinton has only said she would consider such an idea.

According to Sanders’s senior staff, they had begun a second phase of their campaign: the “persuasion” phase. Instead of simply rallying his core supporters and boosting his name recognition, Sanders would actively seek to win over undecided Democratic and independent voters, by precisely articulating a contrast with Hillary Clinton.

What exactly that would look like in person, with voters, remained a mystery.

That evening though, at an event more typical of his campaign, with several hundred people filling the floor of a high school auditorium, Sanders shied away from using her name while addressing the crowd from his podium. “I am told through polls we have an excellent chance to win here in New Hampshire,” he said. “We have not yet put out our first TV ad, our major opponent has spent many, many millions of dollars and you may have seen one or two of her ads.” The line drew a laugh.

He continued with pointed references to the her and her husband, though he did not say the word “Clinton.”

Sanders also reminded the crowd of the 1999 repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act -- that repeal allowed commercial banks to engage in investment banking. “I was in Congress at the time fighting against the deregulation of Wall Street. ... You had a Democratic president [President Bill Clinton], a Republican Congress. ... You had all these guys saying it was a great idea."

“I didn’t believe it for a second and helped lead the effort against it. Wasn’t successful," Sanders said.

It was not as though Sanders went out of his way or took every opportunity to say Clinton’s name while talking to voters. The second day of the trip, he did not mention his opponent during his remarks at either of his first two events. At the final rally of the weekend, Sanders instead landed on her husband’s name, again in reference to Wall Street regulations.

In the end, the line sounded very typical of Sanders’s campaign speeches, with one extra “Clinton” added.