Long-simmering tensions boiled over at Thursday night's
2020 Democratic presidential primary debate in Los Angeles, as a blunt one-on-one sparring match erupted between
Pete Buttigieg and
Elizabeth Warren over their
fundraising -- just minutes after businessman
Andrew Yang slammed Democrats' "obsession" with
President Trump and
impeachment.
Warren, a U.S. senator from Massachusetts, began the fiery exchange by criticizing Buttigieg's
recent lavish fundraiser
in Napa, Calif., saying he was cavorting with "billionaires in wine
caves" -- prompting Buttigieg to retort that Warren, a
multimillionaire, was a populist in name only.
"You know,
according to Forbes magazine, I'm literally the only person on this
stage who is not a millionaire or billionaire," Buttigieg, the mayor of
South Bend, Ind., said. "This is the problem with issuing purity tests
you yourself cannot pass."
BIDEN SAYS 'YES' WHEN ASKED ABOUT SACRIFICING BLUE-COLLAR JOBS FOR CLEAN ENERGY
Democrats,
Buttigieg argued, are "in the fight" of their "lives," and need all the
support they can get -- whether from the wealthy or otherwise. He added
that he'd gladly accept a donation from Warren if she were to offer
one.
"We shouldn't try to [defeat Trump] with one hand tied behind our back," Buttigieg said.
Sen.
Bernie Sanders,
I-Vt., then dismissively referred to Butitigeg as an "energetic guy,"
sarcastically saying he could "take on" former Vice President
Joe Biden's
corporate connections as the two secretly courted big-money donors,
drawing jeers. Sanders noted that Biden has 44 billionaire contributors,
while Buttigieg was "trailing" with only 39.
Sen.
Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota then interjected: "I did not come here to listen to this argument. ... I have never even been to a wine cave."
"I did not come here to listen to this argument. ... I have never even been to a wine cave."
— Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn.
She went on to say she wanted the
Supreme Court's
Citizens United decision overturned by constitutional amendment. The
2010 decision declared unconstitutional the federal regulation of
campaign expenditures by corporations and unions in connection with
campaigns.
It was just one of several Klobuchar moments during the
debate that resonated in the debate hall at Loyola Marymount University
-- even as conservative commentators winced.
"The
'moderate' Klobuchar just advocated for a constitutional amendment that
would give government control over free political speech," the Wall
Street Journal's Kimberly Strassel wrote on Twitter. "This is
'moderation' in today's Democratic Party."
Separately, Klobuchar
unloaded on Buttigieg, after he remarked: "If you want to talk about the
capacity to win, try putting together a coalition to bring you back to
office with 80 percent of the vote as a gay dude in
Mike Pence's Indiana."
Klobuchar
shot back: “If you had won in Indiana, that would be one thing. You
tried and you lost by 20 points.” That was an unsparing reference to
Buttigieg's
failed bid to become Indiana state treasurer.
She
also remarked, "When we were in the last debate, mayor, you basically
mocked the 100 years of experience on the stage. ... You should respect
our experience."
The spat over fundraising erupted shortly
after Yang threw cold water on the media's "obsession" with impeachment,
saying Americans become frustrated "the more we act like Donald Trump
is the cause of all our problems."
Iowa caucuses near
It
was a heated beginning to a wide-ranging debate with less than seven
weeks to go until Iowa’s caucuses kick off, and just a day after House
Democrats
voted to impeach Trump.
The winnowed field of seven Democratic presidential contenders was on
the debate stage for a sixth and final time in 2019.
"If you
turned on cable network news today, you would think [Trump's] our
president because of some combination of Russia, racism, Facebook,
Hillary Clinton and emails all mixed together," Yang said. "But
Americans around the country know different. We blasted away 4 million
manufacturing jobs that were primarily based in Ohio, Michigan,
Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Missouri."
He added, to applause: "What
we have to do, is we have to stop being obsessed over impeachment ...
and start actually digging in and solving the problems that got Donald
Trump elected in the first place."
"What we have to
do, is we have to stop being obsessed over impeachment ... and start
actually digging in and solving the problems that got Donald Trump
elected in the first place."
— Andrew Yang
(At
the end of the debate, Yang sounded a note of self-deprecation: "I know
what you're thinking, America. How am I still on the stage with them?")
But, other Democrats largely echoed their previous attacks on the president's dealings with
Ukraine, and his assertions of executive privilege to block administration officials from testifying.
“The
president is not king in America,” said Klobuchar, who is preparing to
serve as a juror as Trump's impeachment shifts from the House to a
Senate trial. Alluding to President Richard Nixon, she added, "If the
president claims that he is so innocent, then why doesn't he have all
the president's men testify?"
MCCONNELL HEADS BACK TO SENATE FLOOR LATE THURSDAY, SAYS DEMS BREAKING PRECEDENT, NOT SURE WHAT THEY'RE DOING
Klobuchar
went on to call Trump's actions a "global Watergate." Democrats'
inference that Trump is guilty because he does not voluntarily permit
his deputies to testify has
rankled Republicans, who assert the importance of the presumption of innocence.
Biden then knocked Trump's argument that less than half of Americans support his removal from office.
“He's
dumbing down the presidency beyond what I even thought he would do,”
Biden said. “We need to restore the integrity of the presidency.”
Democratic presidential candidates from left, entrepreneur Andrew
Yang, South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass.,
former Vice President Joe Biden, Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., Sen. Amy
Klobuchar, D-Minn., and businessman Tom Steyer stand on stage during a
Democratic presidential primary debate Thursday, Dec. 19, 2019, in Los
Angeles. (Associated Press)
Later, Democrats largely defended Trump's breakthrough U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement, which the
House passed hours earlier.
However,
candidates railed against Trump's economy, despite multiple indicators
that the economy is doing well. The U.S. unemployment rate stands at a
half-century low of 3.5 percent, backed by consistently strong job gains
in recent months that have largely squelched fears of a recession that
had taken hold over the summer.
“This economy is not working for most of us," Buttigieg said.
"The middle class is getting killed,” Biden added. He said the economy was not "on kilter."
In response to a question as to whether he would commit to running for a second term if elected, amid a Politico
report that
he has privately said he would retire after four years in the White
House, the 77-year-old Biden announced that he would not -- saying his
focus is on winning a first term.
When a moderator told the
70-year-old Warren she would be the oldest president ever elected upon
her inauguration, she retorted that she would also be the youngest woman
ever elected to the presidency, drawing applause.
Thursday night's televised contest, sponsored by PBS NewsHour and Politico, brought seven rivals to heavily Democratic
California, the biggest prize in the primary season and home to 1 in 8 Americans.
Declining viewership
The
debate could turn out to be the least-watched so far, as the holidays
approach and impeachment drama dominates the news. Viewership has
declined in each round though five debates, and even campaigns have
grumbled that the candidates would rather be on the ground in early
voting states than again taking the debate stage.
Republicans have
slammed
House Democrats' plan to delay a Senate trial. Hours before the debate,
Noah Feldman, the Harvard Law School professor who testified for
Democrats at the impeachment inquiry earlier this month,
wrote an explosive op-ed asserting
that if Democrats do not forward the impeachment articles to the Senate
as dictated by the Constitution, then Trump was never even impeached at
all. The Constitution dictates that after impeachment by a majority in
the House, a two-thirds vote is needed in the Senate to remove a
president from office.
Asked why
polls show
that many Americans oppose impeaching and removing Trump, Biden called
impeachment a "constitutional necessity," regardless of what the numbers
show.
Warren, for her part, accused Trump of corruption, without addressing the popularity of impeachment.
Klobuchar
also suggested that the U.S. would "probably" need to relocate
Americans away from places impacted by climate change, including
possibly Miami.
Yang, meanwhile, advanced the idea of using thorium to help address the nation's
energy needs.
Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass.,
right, speaks as South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg listens during a
Democratic presidential primary debate Thursday, Dec. 19, 2019, in Los
Angeles. (Associated Press)
No clear front-runner
The
lack of a clear front-runner in the Democratic field came as Democrats
complained that there would be a notable lack of diversity onstage
Thursday as compared to earlier debates. For the first time this cycle,
the debate didn't feature a black or Latino candidate.
The race in
California has largely mirrored national trends, with Biden, Sanders
and Warren clustered at the top of the field, followed by Buttigieg,
Klobuchar, Yang and billionaire philanthropist Tom Steyer.
Conspicuously missing from Thursday's lineup was former New York City Mayor
Michael Bloomberg,
a billionaire who is unable to qualify for the contests because he is
not accepting campaign donations. But even if he's not on the podium,
Bloomberg has been felt in the state: He's running a deluge of TV
advertising in California to introduce himself to voters who probably
know little, if anything, about him.
Bloomberg's late entry into
the contest last month highlighted the overriding issue in the contest
-- electability, a sign of the unease within the Democratic Party about
its crop of candidates and whether any is strong enough to unseat an
incumbent president. The eventual nominee will be tasked with splicing
together the party's disparate factions — a job
Hillary Clinton struggled with after defeating Sanders in a long and bitter primary fight in 2016.
DEBATE IS ON: DEAL REACHED IN UNION DISPUTE THAT THREATENED TO SIDETRACK SHOWDOWN
Biden adviser Symone Sanders said to expect another robust exchange on
health care.
“This
is an issue that is not going away and for good reason, because it is
an issue that in 2018 Democrats ran on and won," she said.
Jess
O'Connell with Buttigieg's campaign said the candidate will “be fully
prepared to have an open and honest conversation about where there are
contrasts between us and the other candidates. This is a really
important time to start to do that. Voters need time to understand the
distinctions between these candidates.” The key issues: health care and
higher education.
The
unsettled race has seen surges at various points by Biden, Warren,
Sanders and Buttigieg, though it's become defined by that cluster of
shifting leaders, with others struggling for momentum. Sen. Kamala
Harris of California, once seen as among the top tier of candidates,
shelved her campaign this month, citing a lack of money. And Warren has
become more aggressive, especially toward Buttigieg, as she tries to
recover from shifting explanations of how she’d pay for “Medicare for
All” without raising taxes.
In a replay of 2016, the shifting race
for the Democratic nomination has showcased the rift between the
party's liberal wing, represented by Sanders and Warren, and candidates
parked in or near the political center, including Biden, Buttigieg and
Bloomberg.
Two candidates who didn’t make the stage will still
make their presence felt for debate watchers with ads reminding viewers
they’re still in the race.
APPELLATE COURT DEMANDS HOUSE DEMS EXPLAIN WHETHER IMPEACHMENT VOTE RENDERS THEIR LEGAL CASE 'MOOT'
Sen.
Cory Booker of New Jersey and former Housing Secretary Julián Castro
aired television ads targeted to primary voters during the debate.
Booker’s was his first television ad, and in it he said even though he
wasn't on the debate stage, “I’m going to win this election anyway.” It
aired as part of a $500,000 campaign, running in Iowa, New Hampshire,
Nevada and South Carolina, as well as New York, Washington, D.C., and
Los Angeles.
A pro-Booker super PAC is also going up with an ad in Iowa highlighting positive reviews of Booker’s past debate performances.
Meanwhile,
Castro is running an ad, in Iowa, in which he argues the state should
no longer go first in Democrats’ nominating process because it doesn’t
reflect the diversity of the Democratic Party.
Both candidates
failed to hit the polling threshold to qualify for the debates and have
in recent weeks become outspoken critics of what they say is a debate
qualification process that favors white candidates over minorities.
Fox News' Paul Steinhauser and The Associated Press contributed to this report.