Hillary Clinton won the Democratic caucuses in Nevada on Saturday. | Getty Clinton: Sanders didn't win Latinos

Hillary Clinton disagreed Sunday with entrance polls in Nevada that showed Bernie Sanders did better than her with Latinos.

“That’s just not what our analysis shows,” the former secretary of state said in an interview with CNN’s Jake Tapper on Sunday. “We don’t believe that the so-called entry polls are particularly accurate.”


Clinton, who won the Democratic caucuses in Nevada on Saturday, pointed to Hispanic-heavy precincts where her campaign “dominated.”

“It was a broad based turnout and we dominated of course in Clark Country, where Las Vegas was,” she said.

Nick Merrill, Clinton's traveling press secretary, also fired back at a statement from the Sanders campaign that said the Vermont senator "won among Latino voters by 8 points."

"I don't typically like to swear on Twitter, but by all accounts so far this is complete and utter bull---t," Merrill said as he tweeted a screenshot of the statement from Sanders' spokesman Michael Briggs.

Clinton also continued to push a point she had brought up during her victory speech Saturday night, the United States is not a “single issue country.”

The comments were a shot at Sanders, who has focused especially hard on economic inequality during the race. (Sanders, speaking later to Tapper on CNN, said he was baffled by her characterization of him as a single-issue candidate.)

“Of course, a lot of it is economic and it needs to be addressed,” Clinton said, but added there were a lot of other issues that mattered to people such as “bigotry and discrimination, student debt.”

“When I say look we’re not a single-issue country, I say that from a lot of experience,” Clinton said.