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Democratic Debate 2019 Live Updates: A High-Speed and Spirited Contest | |
(30 minutes later) | |
Mr. Biden and Mr. Sanders took sharply different approaches in discussing their visions for expanding access to health care, though they didn’t clash with each other on the issue directly. | |
Mr. Biden, after speaking emotionally about losing his son to cancer and daughter and first wife in an automobile accident, suggested he was interested in a more incremental approach, by building on the Affordable Care Act that was passed when President Obama and Mr. Biden, the former vice president, were in office. | |
“Build on Obamacare,” he urged. “To build on what we did. Secondly, to make sure that everyone does have an option, everyone whether they have private insurance, employer insurance or no insurance, they, in fact, can buy in the exchange to a Medicare-like plan.” | |
Mr. Sanders, meanwhile, defended his Medicare-for-All plan without offering specifics on how such an expansive program would be implemented on a national level. | |
“We will have Medicare for All when tens of millions of people are tens of millions are prepared to stand up and tell the insurance companies and the drug companies that their day is gone, that health care is a human right, not something to make huge profits on,” Mr. Sanders said. | |
The two men didn’t call each other out by name, but it was one of the clearest examples of their policy and ideological differences. | |
Mr. Sanders was pressed twice on whether taxes for the middle class would go up in a Sanders administration as Mr. Sanders pushes for a sweeping, boldly progressive agenda. | Mr. Sanders was pressed twice on whether taxes for the middle class would go up in a Sanders administration as Mr. Sanders pushes for a sweeping, boldly progressive agenda. |
“Will taxes go up for the middle class in a Sanders administration and if so, how do you sell that to voters?” she asked. | “Will taxes go up for the middle class in a Sanders administration and if so, how do you sell that to voters?” she asked. |
Mr. Sanders emphasized the challenges of income inequality in the United States and reiterated his support for Medicare for All and tuition-free public college. | Mr. Sanders emphasized the challenges of income inequality in the United States and reiterated his support for Medicare for All and tuition-free public college. |
Pressed again, he replied, “Yes, they will pay more in taxes but less in health care for what they get.” | Pressed again, he replied, “Yes, they will pay more in taxes but less in health care for what they get.” |
Just a few minutes into the debate, Mr. Hickenlooper took a veiled swipe at Mr. Sanders’s most expansive proposals: “You can’t eliminate private insurance for 180 million people, many who don’t want to give it up,” he said. | |
Asked to respond to those who say nominating a socialist would re-elect Mr. Trump, Mr. Sanders, a proud democratic socialist, pointed to polls that show him ahead at this early stage in a head-to-head match up with the president. | |
“Well, President Trump, you are not standing up for working families when you try to throw 32 million people off the health care that they have,” Mr. Sanders said, adding that under Mr. Trump benefits go to “the top 1 percent.” | |
“That’s how we beat Trump,” he said. “We expose him for the fraud he is.” | |
Several candidates clashed over whether Democrats should embrace or avoid big policy ideas that President Trump has branded as a form of socialism. Mr. Sanders identifies as a democratic socialism. | |
“We can’t promise every American a job, if you want universal health care coverage, I believe health care is a right, not a privilege,” Mr. Hickenlooper said. “You can’t eliminate private insurance for 180 million people many who don’t want to give it up.” | |
Mr. Swalwell took a direct swipe at Mr. Biden’s age early in the debate, describing a moment years ago when he said Mr. Biden “said it was time to pass the torch to a new generation of Americans.” | |
“If we’re going to solve the issues of the nation, pass the torch. If we’re going to solve the issue of climate chaos, pass the torch. If we are going to solve school violence, pass the torch,” he said. | |
Mr. Biden, 76, smiled. | |
“I’m still holding onto that torch,” he said before pivoting to discuss his education plans. | |
As the candidates engaged in a back and forth about generational change, talking over one another, Ms. Harris butted in with a canned line that appeared to land well in the auditorium. | |
“Hey, guys, you know what, America does not want to witness a food fight. They want to know how we will put food on their table!” she said to applause. | |
The room went silent as Ms. Harris said she believes no one should work “more than one job” to put food on the table in their homes. | |
The first question to Mr. Buttigieg was about his opposition to the proposal of Mr. Sanders to eliminate all student debt and make public college tuition-free. | |
“I just don’t believe it makes sense to ask working class families to subsidize even the children of billionaires,” Mr. Buttigieg said. “I think the children of the wealthiest Americans can pay at least a little of tuition. While I want tuition costs to go down, I don’t think we can buy down every last penny for that.” | |
Mr. Buttigieg, 37, said he was sympathetic to student loan, saying he has “six-figure student debt.” | |
Mr. Swalwell jumped in. “I have a $100,000 student loan debt for myself. If I can’t count on the people around when this problem was created to be the ones to solve it,” he said. | |
Mr. Swalwell added, “This generation is ready to lead.” | |
Mr. Biden was asked about his recent remarks to donors that he would not “demonize the rich” as president. He used the opening to pivot to attacking President Trump, a move that has been the centerpiece of his campaign. | |
“Donald Trump thinks Wall Street built America,” Mr. Biden said at the start of his answer, contrasting himself with the president. | |
He mentioned Mr. Trump two more times, saying that “Donald Trump has put us in a horrible situation” in regards to “income inequality” and that he would seek take aim to “eliminating Donald Trump’s tax cuts for the wealthy.” | |
The crowd cheered. | |
In his next turn, Mr. Sanders starting in on Mr. Trump too, calling him a “pathological liar” and a “racist.” | |
“That’s how we beat Trump, we expose him for the fraud he is,” Mr. Sanders said. | |
The crowd cheered yet again. | |
Mr. Biden and Mr. Sanders, the two leading candidates, took the stage one after another with the other eight Democratic hopefuls. As they waved to the audience and then stood still, they didn’t look at each other or exchange any words. | Mr. Biden and Mr. Sanders, the two leading candidates, took the stage one after another with the other eight Democratic hopefuls. As they waved to the audience and then stood still, they didn’t look at each other or exchange any words. |
Then again, few of the Democrats interacted — only Mr. Yang (who, interestingly, chose not to wear a tie) and Mr. Hickenlooper appeared to share some small talk | Then again, few of the Democrats interacted — only Mr. Yang (who, interestingly, chose not to wear a tie) and Mr. Hickenlooper appeared to share some small talk |
Ms. Harris flashed smiles at the audience and laughed at several points. After a couple of minutes of posing for the cameras, they took their spots behind the podiums — with Mr. Biden, Mr. Sanders, Ms. Harris and Mr. Buttigieg standing center stage. | Ms. Harris flashed smiles at the audience and laughed at several points. After a couple of minutes of posing for the cameras, they took their spots behind the podiums — with Mr. Biden, Mr. Sanders, Ms. Harris and Mr. Buttigieg standing center stage. |
It has been a huge day in Democratic politics: A loss at the Supreme Court on gerrymandering, a mixed result at the court on a new citizenship question for the census, and debilitating strife between liberals and moderates over humanitarian aid for the border. | It has been a huge day in Democratic politics: A loss at the Supreme Court on gerrymandering, a mixed result at the court on a new citizenship question for the census, and debilitating strife between liberals and moderates over humanitarian aid for the border. |
Against this backdrop, and with Democrats searching for a 2020 presidential standard-bearer who can unify the party, Mr. Biden will take the debate stage tonight as an uncertain front-runner: He is leading in the polls and is popular with donors, but he has had stumbles in his two months as a candidate and has yet to be seriously tested in the campaign. | Against this backdrop, and with Democrats searching for a 2020 presidential standard-bearer who can unify the party, Mr. Biden will take the debate stage tonight as an uncertain front-runner: He is leading in the polls and is popular with donors, but he has had stumbles in his two months as a candidate and has yet to be seriously tested in the campaign. |
Tonight’s debate — his first in seven years — will be his first big hurdle. | Tonight’s debate — his first in seven years — will be his first big hurdle. |
[A matchup of four heavyweights. Here’s your guide to the political dynamics in tonight’s debate.] | [A matchup of four heavyweights. Here’s your guide to the political dynamics in tonight’s debate.] |
How Mr. Biden will perform is one of the biggest questions of the night. For instance, he is an enthusiastic raconteur with decades of political war stories that he often draws on to highlight his government experience. But as he makes his third run for president, Mr. Biden can go on meandering tangents, sometimes interrupting himself with a “well, anyway,” or going off topic to reference lessons he learned from Senate colleagues years ago. | How Mr. Biden will perform is one of the biggest questions of the night. For instance, he is an enthusiastic raconteur with decades of political war stories that he often draws on to highlight his government experience. But as he makes his third run for president, Mr. Biden can go on meandering tangents, sometimes interrupting himself with a “well, anyway,” or going off topic to reference lessons he learned from Senate colleagues years ago. |
With limited time tonight, can he stay — crisply — on the forward-looking message he has suggested he wants to deliver? | With limited time tonight, can he stay — crisply — on the forward-looking message he has suggested he wants to deliver? |
This won’t be his first test on that front. At a presidential debate in 2007, Mr. Biden was asked about his “uncontrolled verbosity” and whether he could “reassure voters in this country that you would have the discipline you would need on the world stage? | This won’t be his first test on that front. At a presidential debate in 2007, Mr. Biden was asked about his “uncontrolled verbosity” and whether he could “reassure voters in this country that you would have the discipline you would need on the world stage? |
“Yes,” Mr. Biden replied, to laughter. | “Yes,” Mr. Biden replied, to laughter. |
A decade later, his ability to connect — briefly, and with humor — will be under scrutiny. | A decade later, his ability to connect — briefly, and with humor — will be under scrutiny. |
[We tracked down the 2020 Democrats and asked them the same set of questions. Watch them answer.] | [We tracked down the 2020 Democrats and asked them the same set of questions. Watch them answer.] |
In Wednesday night’s debate, many of the candidates struck boldly progressive notes. With the exceptions of Cory Booker, in his discussion of the Iran nuclear deal and health care, and Amy Klobuchar, on issues like private insurance, few candidates made memorable overtures to middle-of-the-road voters in the Democratic Party. | In Wednesday night’s debate, many of the candidates struck boldly progressive notes. With the exceptions of Cory Booker, in his discussion of the Iran nuclear deal and health care, and Amy Klobuchar, on issues like private insurance, few candidates made memorable overtures to middle-of-the-road voters in the Democratic Party. |
The tone tonight could tilt more moderate, despite the presence of Mr. Sanders, a democratic socialist, as well as Ms. Gillibrand and Ms. Harris, two senators who have embraced many liberal policies. | The tone tonight could tilt more moderate, despite the presence of Mr. Sanders, a democratic socialist, as well as Ms. Gillibrand and Ms. Harris, two senators who have embraced many liberal policies. |
Mr. Biden is betting that the Democratic electorate is far less liberal than some political operatives expect, and he constantly nods to those with more conservative viewpoints — sometimes controversially. | Mr. Biden is betting that the Democratic electorate is far less liberal than some political operatives expect, and he constantly nods to those with more conservative viewpoints — sometimes controversially. |
There are several others onstage who are also running as more pragmatic centrists — and who are eagerly looking for a moment to break out of low polling numbers — including Mr. Hickenlooper and Mr. Bennet. And Mr. Buttigieg, a Midwesterner, can sometimes strike a moderate tone even if his policy views tilt left. | There are several others onstage who are also running as more pragmatic centrists — and who are eagerly looking for a moment to break out of low polling numbers — including Mr. Hickenlooper and Mr. Bennet. And Mr. Buttigieg, a Midwesterner, can sometimes strike a moderate tone even if his policy views tilt left. |
[Who spoke the most? Who was most effective? Seven takeaways from the first debate.] | [Who spoke the most? Who was most effective? Seven takeaways from the first debate.] |
Hours before the debate began, a majority of justices ruled that federal courts should not hear challenges to partisan gerrymandering. | Hours before the debate began, a majority of justices ruled that federal courts should not hear challenges to partisan gerrymandering. |
While state legislatures dominated by both political parties have long relied on gerrymandering to draw voting districts that favor one party over the other, in recent years Republicans — who have won expanded influence in state capitals around the country — have been especially associated with the practice. | While state legislatures dominated by both political parties have long relied on gerrymandering to draw voting districts that favor one party over the other, in recent years Republicans — who have won expanded influence in state capitals around the country — have been especially associated with the practice. |
The Supreme Court ruling may give some Democrats another opening to draw contrasts with the G.O.P. | The Supreme Court ruling may give some Democrats another opening to draw contrasts with the G.O.P. |
Are you watching the debates? We’re eager to hear from our readers. Please tell us in the comments what you think of the candidates’ performances. | Are you watching the debates? We’re eager to hear from our readers. Please tell us in the comments what you think of the candidates’ performances. |
For Democrats, who did you did you support going into the debates? Has that changed? If so, tell us why. | For Democrats, who did you did you support going into the debates? Has that changed? If so, tell us why. |
We want to hear from Republicans, too — who has stood out to you? Did any of the candidates resonate with you or seem to pose a serious threat to President Trump’s re-election bid? | We want to hear from Republicans, too — who has stood out to you? Did any of the candidates resonate with you or seem to pose a serious threat to President Trump’s re-election bid? |
We may feature your comments in upcoming stories. Please include your name, where you live. | We may feature your comments in upcoming stories. Please include your name, where you live. |
Reported and written by Katie Glueck, Shane Goldmacher and Sydney Ember. | Reported and written by Katie Glueck, Shane Goldmacher and Sydney Ember. |