^ ~1,000 is the standard phone poll size, that's how they get all the voter support stats too.
AP Fact Checks Hillary and Bernie
{ CLINTON on her email practices: "I have been as transparent as I know to be. … I said I have answered all the questions."
THE FACTS: Clinton has yet to explain how the server was set up and serviced, whether she informed the State Department about her decision to use the private system and, most important, how it was protected from hacking attempts. Her server also was connected to the Internet in ways that made it more vulnerable to hackers. But her campaign has repeatedly declined to address these details. }
{ SANDERS: "Make every public college and university in this country tuition-free."
CLINTON: "My plan would enable anyone to go to a public college or university tuition-free. You would not have to borrow money for tuition."
THE FACTS: Free for the students, but someone has to pay.
Sanders' plan would cover tuition and fees at public universities -- a $70 billion annual expense with the federal government picking up two-thirds of that tab by taxing trading in the financial markets.
The Clinton plan is bound to cost more than the $35 billion per year over 10 years projected by her campaign. This is because more students would probably switch to public universities on the potential to graduate without debt, raising costs for the government and potentially leaving many modestly endowed private institutions in the lurch.
Neither candidate told TV viewers about the costs to the treasury of what they propose. }
{ SANDERS: "What we need to do is … raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour."
THE FACTS: That might boost pay for many workers, but as with college tuition, there's a cost: His plan would probably cause many low-wage employers to outsource or automate some jobs .
A jump to $15 an hour would be more than double the federal minimum of $7.25. It would also be far above the minimum wage's previous peak of just under $11, adjusted for inflation, in 1968. And a $15 minimum wage is above the median wage in eight states, which suggests a boost to $15 could cause widespread job losses in those states. }