Bill on the stump for Hill again today after saying 'Sometimes... I wish we weren't married then I could say what I really think' 

  • Bill Clinton arrived at a polling place in Portsmouth, New Hampshire this morning making a last minute push for his wife 
  • A John Kasich supporter tried getting the ex-president to go for his guy instead -  'I don't think so,' said Clinton 
  • Last night Clinton confessed that sometimes he wished he wasn't married to the candidate so he could go rogue  

Bill Clinton was left off his leash this morning showing up at a middle school in Portsmouth, New Hampshire to encourage more votes.

'I like Kasich,' Clinton said to a man holding up a sign for the Republican governor of Ohio. 

'I think he'd make a good president,' said the man. 'Can we change your vote?' 

But Bill Clinton was there to support his wife Hillary Clinton, who's in danger of losing the nation's first primary by more than 13 points to rival Bernie Sanders. 

'I don't think so,' Clinton replied, having just suggested last night that he wished he wasn't married to the candidate so he could speak more freely, most likely about the Vermont senator.

'Sometimes when I am on a stage like this, I wish we weren't married, then I could say what I really think,' Bill Clinton said last night in Hudson, New Hampshire, before introducing his wife at a last-minute rally.

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Terie Norelli, a former Democratic member of the New Hampshire House, caught Bill Clinton on camera this morning as he visited a polling place at a Portsmouth middle school 

Terie Norelli, a former Democratic member of the New Hampshire House, caught Bill Clinton on camera this morning as he visited a polling place at a Portsmouth middle school 

Bill Clinton posted this tweet of a supporter taking a selfie with the former president. He's been helping his wife in a last minute push in the state 

Bill Clinton posted this tweet of a supporter taking a selfie with the former president. He's been helping his wife in a last minute push in the state 

Bill Clinton said he was 'happy' in his marriage, but told an audience in Hudson, New Hampshire that sometimes he wished he wasn't married to the candidate so he could 'say what I really think' 

Bill Clinton said he was 'happy' in his marriage, but told an audience in Hudson, New Hampshire that sometimes he wished he wasn't married to the candidate so he could 'say what I really think' 

Bill Clinton, pictured here squeezing his candidate wife Hillary Clinton has said several times that he regrets not being able to be frank about this election 

Bill Clinton, pictured here squeezing his candidate wife Hillary Clinton has said several times that he regrets not being able to be frank about this election 

'I don't mean that in a negative way,' he added. 'I am happy.'   

 While refusing to let the name Bernie Sanders roll of his lips, former President Bill Clinton went after the Vermont senator at a campaign rally earlier in the day in Manchester.

'It bothers me to be in an election where debate is impossible because if you disagree you're just part of the establishment,' Clinton said today at Manchester Community College, shortly before his wife walked on stage. 

The former president also thanks the young voters who were actually supporting Hillary Clinton

In Iowa, she lost 18 to 29-year-old voters by 70 points. 

'I am so grateful for all the millennial young people who are supporting Hillary,' Bill Clinton said. 

'And they are just as mad as the ones who aren't,' he noted. 

'They just know they've got to translate that anger to answer and that resentment to results,' he added.  

Bill Clinton has started attacking his wife's Democratic rival Bernie Sanders suggesting that the Vermont senator can't go around labeling who falls in the 'establishment' of the party

Bill Clinton has started attacking his wife's Democratic rival Bernie Sanders suggesting that the Vermont senator can't go around labeling who falls in the 'establishment' of the party

TEAMWORK: Bill and Hillary gave Sanders the one-two punch yesterday in New Hampshire. She hit him for attending a Martha's Vineyard fundraiser for the Democratic Party attended by the same sorts of people he deplores her for taking checks from

TEAMWORK: Bill and Hillary gave Sanders the one-two punch yesterday in New Hampshire. She hit him for attending a Martha's Vineyard fundraiser for the Democratic Party attended by the same sorts of people he deplores her for taking checks from

POPULAR: Hillary is losing young people in New Hampshire more than 8-1 - but they seemed happy to see Bill at a Manchester rally

POPULAR: Hillary is losing young people in New Hampshire more than 8-1 - but they seemed happy to see Bill at a Manchester rally

Entering the community college yesterday with daughter Chelsea at his side, Bill Clinton confessed that, 'the harder this election gets, the more I wish I were just a former president ... and not the spouse of the next one.'

The line got big cheers. 

'And I'm so happy all the time because of our granddaughter and grandchild-to-be that I'm not mad at anybody, but I respect the anger, the apprehension, the anxiety that so many Americans have,' Clinton continued. 

He noted how many Americans haven't seen their paychecks increase since the day he left the White House in 2001. 

'So we need big changes, that's right, you'll hear Hillary talk about her visions,' Clinton said. 'The real question isn't whether we need big changes ,yes, the real question is, who's got the best ideas, who's the best change-maker.' 

Pointing fingers, but not saying names, Clinton asked if it was fair to label his wife, or New Hampshire Gov. Maggie Hassan, or New Hampshire Sen. Jeanne Shaheen as 'establishment.' 

The two female politicians are supporting Hillary Clinton and were also on hand to introduce the candidate at the earlier stop.

Vermont Gov. Peter Shumlin also got a shout-out, with Clinton noting how he was supporting the former secretary of state and unsuccessfully tried to bring single-payer healthcare to his state, the plan that Sanders support. 

COMEBACK KID: Bill and Hillary are seen here in Bedford New Hampshire during his 1992 campaign - when he came from behind to come in second in the state

COMEBACK KID: Bill and Hillary are seen here in Bedford New Hampshire during his 1992 campaign - when he came from behind to come in second in the state

ROLE REVERSAL: Bill Clinton even dressed the part Sunday as he ripped into Bernie Sanders at a campaign rally in New Hampshire 

In Vermont it didn't work. 

'That's hardly an establishment candidate,' Bill Clinton said. 

Former Arkansas Sen. Mark Pryor, who is going door to door for the Clintons in New Hampshire in advance of the state's primary tomorrow, put it a smart way, Bill Clinton pointed out. 

'I asked Mark Pryor what he said when he was walking on doors, he said, 'I like them both, I served with them both, but she gets a lot more done,'' the former president said. 

Yesterday's comments were an encore to the performance Bill Clinton gave Sunday in Milford, while Hillary Clinton was out of town in Flint, Michigan.

It was then that the former president began whacking Sanders around, without saying the Vermont senator's name.  

'When you're making a revolution, you can't be too careful with the facts,' Clinton said, according to Politico.  

'The New Hampshire I campaigned in really cared that you knew what you were doing, and how it was paid for,' Clinton said, reminding the voters of his own relationship with the state.

In the 1992 New Hampshire, Bill Clinton's campaign, under the duress of sinking poll numbers, pulled off a silver medal in the state, which eventually propelled him to the Democratic nomination.  

Sanders has a lot of large-scale ideas – universal healthcare, tuition-free public college, etc. – and has broadly described how he would pay for it, by raising taxes, but any economic drag that might occur from the new taxes has not been accounted for.  

Clinton took on the 'Bernie Bros,' men on social media sites who are harassing Hillary Clinton's female supporters for only 'voting with their vagina[s].' 

The former president called out the 'vicious trolling and attacks that are literally too profane ... not to mention sexist.' 

He also reminded the audience about the data breach that occurred, allowing Sanders campaign operatives to sniff around the Clinton voter file last December. 

'It was your campaign that made 25 separate inquiries in the mere space of 30 minutes trying to [loot] information out of computers,' Bill Clinton said, suggesting Sanders' public apology should be discounted because 'in private they sent an email complaining [about the DNC] leaving the keys in the car, and said, 'all we did was drive off.'' 

Clinton noted how the Sanders campaign raised $1 million off the incident. 

'You gotta give it to 'em,' Bill Clinton said. 'I mean, that's really good.'

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