Clinton struggling to win over the young voters she needs
(AP) — John Morales was interning for Bernie Sanders' campaign when the longshot Democratic candidate's hopes started to fade in the spring.
The Vermont senator is an opponent of foreign trade deals and won over many younger voters in the primaries by calling for enormous government spending to guarantee universal health care and free college tuition.
[...] he shares Sanders' outsider, tell-it-like-it-is style, social liberalism and skepticism about military intervention overseas — attributes that have won over enough Sanders supporters to worry Democrats he could jeopardize Hillary Clinton's chances in November.
Morales, a 22-year-old community college student and Army Reservist, is one of those converts — he's now interning for Johnson.
With roughly a month until Election Day, Clinton is still struggling to win over young voters who twice helped elect Barack Obama.
"Most of the supporters and volunteers who come in here are former Bernie people," said Woodrow Johnston, the Las Vegas-based deputy director of youth outreach for the candidate.
A CNN poll this week suggested third-party candidates could make a difference in Colorado:
Brooke Long, a 23-year-old geography major, tells pollsters she supports Johnson in hopes the Libertarian candidate reaches the 15 percent polling threshold to let him into presidential debates.
