CARSON
CITY, Nev. (AP) — With the Nevada caucuses less than a week away,
Democratic presidential candidates campaigning this weekend were fixated
on a rival who wasn’t contesting the state.
Bernie
Sanders, Joe Biden, Amy Klobuchar, Elizabeth Warren and Pete Buttigieg
all targeted billionaire Mike Bloomberg, accusing him of buying his way
into the election and making clear they were eager to take him on in a
debate.
“He
thinks he can buy this election,” Sanders said of the former New York
mayor at a Sunday rally in Carson City, Nevada. “Well, I’ve got news for
Mr. Bloomberg — the American people are sick and tired of billionaires
buying elections!”
Their
attacks are a sign of how seriously the field is starting to take
Bloomberg as he gains traction in the race and is on the cusp of
qualifying for Wednesday’s Democratic debate in Las Vegas. Bloomberg has
bypassed the traditional early voting states including Nevada, focusing
instead on the 14 states that vote in the Super Tuesday primary on
March 3. He has spent more than $417 million of his own
multibillion-dollar fortune on advertising nationwide, an unprecedented
sum for any candidate in a primary.
The
focus on Bloomberg comes amid anxiety among many establishment-aligned
Democrats over the early strength of Sanders, who won last week’s New
Hampshire primary and essentially tied for first place in Iowa with Pete
Buttigieg, the former mayor of South Bend, Indiana. Sanders is hoping
to notch a victory in Nevada on Saturday as moderates struggle to unite
behind a candidate who could serve as a counter to the Vermont senator,
who has long identified as a democratic socialist.
The
hundreds of millions of dollars that Bloomberg has pumped into the
Super Tuesday states has only heightened the sense of uncertainty
surrounding the Democratic race.
At
Sanders’ rally, the crowded cheered as the Vermont senator joked that
Bloomberg is “struggling, he’s down to his last $60 billion” and derided
him for skipping the early primary states.
It
marked an escalation of the salvo Sanders launched Saturday against the
former mayor, when he ticked off a litany of conservative positions
Bloomberg has taken in the past, including opposing a minimum wage hike
and his opposition to a number of Barack Obama’s policies while
president. On Saturday, Sanders suggested the former mayor’s past
conservatism and controversial comments make him a weak candidate
against President Donald Trump, charging that Bloomberg, “with all his
money, will not create the kind of excitement and energy we need” to
beat Trump.
And
on Sunday, he was joined by the current mayor of New York, Bill de
Blasio, who just this week endorsed Sanders. De Blasio introduced
Sanders with an attack of his own on his predecessor, telling the crowd,
“I’m sorry to report to you the chief proponent of stop and frisk is
now running for president.”
Klobuchar,
speaking on CBS’ “Face the Nation,” accused Bloomberg of avoiding
scrutiny by blanketing the airwaves and sidestepping debates or tough
televised interviews.
“I
think he cannot hide behind the airwaves and the money,” she said. “I
think he has to come on the shows. And I personally think he should be
on the debate stage.”
Klobuchar
said she’s raised $12 million since her better-than-expected finish in
third place in New Hampshire. She’s maintained her campaign through a
series of strong debate performances and argued that Bloomberg being on
stage with his rivals would level the playing field.
“I’m never going to beat him on the airwaves, but I can beat him on the debate stage,” she said.
Biden,
speaking on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” suggested that Bloomberg will face
increased scrutiny as the race continues, pointing to his record on
issues relating to race.
“$60 billion can buy you a lot of advertising, but it can’t erase your record,” he said.
Biden
knocked Bloomberg’s past support of stop-and-frisk policing policies
and his comments suggesting cracking down on racist mortgage lending
practices, known as “redlining,” contributed to the financial crisis, as
well as his 2008 refusal to endorse Barack Obama for president.
Bloomberg has been airing ads that tie him closely to Obama on issues
like gun control and climate change.
When
asked on MSNBC about whether Bloomberg shares the values of the
Democratic Party, Warren also went after the former mayor over his
comments on redlining, declaring that “anyone who is out there trying to
blame African Americans for the financial crash of 2008...is not
someone who should be representing our party.”
Buttigieg
likened Bloomberg to Trump when asked about reports that Bloomberg made
sexist comments towards women and fostered a culture of sexism at his
company.
“I think he’s going to have to answer for that and speak to it,” Buttigieg said.
He
later added: “Look, this is a time where voters are looking for a
president who can lead us out of the days when it was just commonplace
or accepted to have these kinds of sexist and discriminatory attitudes.
Right now, this is our chance to do something different.”
But
even as the front-running candidates kept one eye on their Super
Tuesday showdown with Bloomberg, they also focused on the more immediate
task of winning over minority voters, who will play a pivotal role in
the contests in Nevada and South Carolina.
Biden
reminded older parishioners at the First African Methodist Episcopal
Church in North Las Vegas of 1960s television footage of black
protesters in Birmingham, Alabama, being attacked by police dogs and
sprayed with fire hoses on the orders of city official Bull Connor.
Biden
said today’s racists are not “Bull Connors, not out in overalls.
They’re wearing fine suits, and they’re living in the White House.”
The
former vice president is relying on his strength among black voters and
an explicit appeal to Latinos and other minorities to deliver him a
strong showing in the coming contests after posting disappointing
finishes in Iowa and New Hampshire, which both feature electorates that
are whiter on average than the national population.
Biden
has been hammering home the need for any Democratic candidate to appeal
to voters of color. On Sunday, he told black lawmakers and other
political figures at the Nevada Black Legislative Caucus’s Black History
Month observance that “the black community has in its power to
determine who the next president of the United States is going to be.”
Nevada
and South Carolina are also a key test for Buttigieg and Klobuchar, who
have thus far ridden on momentum from stronger-than-expected finishes
in Iowa and New Hampshire, respectively, but have both faced questions
about their appeal to minority voters.
On
Sunday, when asked to name a mistake he had made as mayor, Buttigieg
acknowledged that he failed to recognize the pain that his decisions
made, particularly for communities of color.
“I
was laser-focused on making sure we did the right thing legally ... I
didn’t always hear the voices who were talking about the story behind
the story,” Buttigieg said. “I was a data guy.”
Later
that day, at a luncheon for the Nevada Legislative Black Caucus,
Buttigieg said he was proud of his work with black leaders in his city
to deliver affordable housing and improve the black unemployment rate,
but he said he was “humbled by the work left to do.”
___
Jaffe
reported from Washington. Associated Press writers Jonathan Cooper and
Bill Barrow in Las Vegas contributed to this report.
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