EMBED >More News Videos Eyewitness News talks with Democratic candidates Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders ahead of this week's New York primary.

EMBED >More News Videos Bill Ritter talks with New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio.

EMBED >More News Videos Bill Ritter talks with Republican presidential candidate John Kasich.

EMBED >More News Videos Bill Ritter talks with political analyst Douglas Muzzio.

EMBED >More News Videos Bill Ritter talks with Mike Ryan of the New York City Board of Elections.

NEW YORK (WABC) -- A weekend sprint is underway to the New York primary finish line for the candidates who want to be president, and Hillary Clinton appeared Sunday on a special hour-long episode of "Up Close".And an angry Clinton is claiming that she is held to a different standard. She sat down with Eyewitness News political reporter Dave Evans to film the "Up Close" segment, where she blasted Bernie Sanders in a campaign that has turned nasty as of late."Sanders repeatedly says 'I've never run a negative campaign,'" she said. "Well he needs to look around him, listen to the people who talk before gets on at his rallies and hear what they say...I think he has played along with the negativity you find in his campaign."The latest polling shows Clinton with a commanding lead in New York."On Tuesday, we have a big decision to make," she says in her latest ad, which touts her big endorsements. "And the New York Daily News and the New York Times already made theirs."But Sanders has painted her as too rich and too tied to Wall Street."I have really been somewhat surprised to see the kinds of things the Sanders campaign is saying and implying," she said.Clinton has earned a handsome payday from speeches to Wall Street executives, which she has kept secret, refusing to release the transcripts."You know, I've said I will when everybody does," she said. "I'm tired of being held to a different standard all the time."She also takes exception to allegations that she is dishonest."I think it's regrettable," she said. "The people of New York voted for me twice. They counted on me. They trusted me."Clinton spoke of frustration with Sanders, claiming he's flubbed interviews on his central theme of reforming Wall Street."He couldn't answer basic questions," she said. "He just keeps diagnosing the problem."Still, she stopped short of questioning his qualifications."I've said I will take Bernie Sanders over Donald Trump or Ted Cruz any day," she said. "And I mean that."Part 1: Interviews with Hillary Clinton and Bernie SandersPart 2: New York City Mayor Bill de BlasioPart 3: Republican presidential candidate John KasichPart 4: Political analyst Douglas MuzzioPart 5: Mike Ryan of the New York City Board of ElectionsPart 6: Close