ANDREA MITCHELL, NBC NEWS: I think the Clinton campaign felt that they would have a really enthusiastic base among women. And what they are finding is what all of us are finding in the polling, that there's a generational divide, that older women, college educated women, are supporting Hillary Clinton. Younger women are less so. What do you think -- what do you think the problem that she's had in attracting millennials is?



SEN. CLAIRE MCCASKILL (D-MO): Well, I think part of it is they haven’t yet fully looked at the choices. There may not be a natural enthusiasm because the Clintons have been around all of their lives and this doesn't feel as new and as different and as historic as it does to some of us who understand what it means to have a woman president in light of the struggles we have gone through.



But as this goes along, if their choice is somebody like Marco Rubio, who says there should be no exception for an illegal abortion, even if you have been raped. When you have someone like Ted Cruz who wants to roll back the clock on equality for lesbians and gays in this country, I think you’re going to see the millennial generation get fired up. And I think they will be part of a very important electorate that will put Hillary Clinton in the White House.