A dozen Democratic presidential candidates
participated in a spirited debate Tuesday over health care, taxes, gun
control and impeachment. Takeaways from the three-hour forum in
Westerville, Ohio.
WARREN’S RISE ATTRACTS ATTACKS
Sen.
Elizabeth Warren found Tuesday that her rise in the polls may come with
a steep cost. She’s now a clear target for attacks, particularly from
more moderate challengers, and her many plans are now being subjected to
much sharper scrutiny.
Minnesota Sen. Amy
Klobuchar and South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg slammed her for
not acknowledging, as Bernie Sanders has, that middle-class taxes would
increase under the single-payer health plan both she and Sanders favor.
“At least Bernie’s being honest with this,” Klobuchar said.
“I
don’t think the American people are wrong when they say what they want
is a choice,” Buttigieg told Warren. His plan maintains private
insurance but would allow people to buy into Medicare.
Candidates
also pounced on Warren’s suggestion that only she and Sanders want to
take on billionaires while the rest of the field wants to protect them.
Former Texas Rep. Beto O’Rourke told Warren it didn’t seem like she
wanted to lift people up and she is “more focused on being punitive.”
And
they piled onto her signature proposal, a 2% wealth tax to raise the
trillions needed for many of her ambitious proposals. Technology
entrepreneur Andrew Yang noted that such a measure has failed in almost
every European country where it’s been tried.
THAT 70s SHOW
The
stage included three 70-something candidates who would be the oldest
people ever elected to a first term as president — including 78-year-old
Sanders, who had a heart attack earlier this month. Moderators asked
all three how they could do the job. None really addressed the question.
Sanders
invited the public to a major rally he’s planning in New York City next
week and vowed to take the fight to corporate elites.
Biden
promised to release his medical records before the Iowa caucuses next
year and said he was running because the country needs an elder
statesman in the White House after Trump.
Warren,
whose campaign has highlighted her hours-long sessions posing for
selfies with supporters, promised to “out-organize and outlast” any
other candidate — including Trump. Then she pivoted to her campaign
argument that Democrats need to put forth big ideas rather than return
to the past, a dig at Biden.
__
ONE VOICE ON IMPEACHMENT
The opening question was a batting practice fastball for the Democratic candidates: Should Trump be impeached?
They were in steadfast agreement. All 12 of them. Largely with variations on the word “corrupt” to describe the president.
Warren
was asked first if voters should decide whether Trump should stay in
office. She responded, “There are decisions that are bigger than
politics.”
Biden, who followed Sanders, offered a rare admission: “I agree with Bernie.”
The
only hint of dissonance came from Rep. Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii, who was
one of the last Democratic House members to back an impeachment
inquiry. She lamented that some Democrats had been calling for Trump’s
impeachment since right after the 2016 election, undermining the party’s
case against him.
__
KLOBUCHAR: MINNESOTA NOT-SO-NICE
Klobuchar has faded into the background in previous debates, but she stood out on the crowded stage.
She
also went on the attack. She chided entrepreneur Andrew Yang for
seeming to compare Russian interference in the 2016 election to U.S.
foreign policy. But her main barbs were reserved for Warren. “I
appreciate Elizabeth’s work but, again, the difference between a plan
and a pipe dream is something you can actually get done,” she said.
After
Warren seemed to suggest other candidates were protecting billionaires,
Klobuchar pounced. “No one on this stage wants to protect
billionaires,” Klobuchar said. “Even the billionaire doesn’t want to
protect billionaires.”
That was a reference
to investor Tom Steyer, who had agreed with Sanders’ condemnation of
billionaires and called for a wealth tax — despite the fact that his
wealth funded his last-minute campaign to clear the debate thresholds
and appear Tuesday night.
Klobuchar also forcefully condemned Trump’s abandonment of the Kurds in Syria.
__
BOOKER THE PEACEMAKER
New
Jersey Sen. Cory Booker has been trying to campaign on the power of
love and unity. It hasn’t vaulted him to the top of the polls, but it
drew perhaps the biggest cheers from the crowd Tuesday night.
As
candidates bickered over their tax plans, Booker shut it down. “We’ve
got one shot to make Donald Trump a one-term president and how we talk
about each other in this debate actually really matters,” he said.
“Tearing each other down because we have a different plan is
unacceptable.”
Later, as candidates tussled
over foreign policy and Syria, Booker again tried to bring the debate
back to morals. “This president is turning the moral leadership of this
country into a dumpster fire,” he said, before launching into a furious
condemnation of Trump’s foreign policy.
The
New Jersey senator’s inability to break out of the pack has puzzled
Democrats who long saw him as a top-tier presidential candidate.
No comments:
Post a Comment