Democrats debate as Buttigieg rises, impeachment engrosses voters
The three leading candidates for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination — Bernie Sanders, Joe Biden and Elizabeth Warren — are being challenged by a fourth, rising candidate: Pete Buttigieg (SAUL LOEB)
Atlanta (AFP) – Joe Biden and other leading 2020 White House contenders square off Wednesday evening at the latest Democratic presidential debate, seeking to blunt the surge of rising-star candidate Pete Buttigieg.
Former vice president Biden, Senator Elizabeth Warren and Senator Bernie Sanders lead in national polling for the Democratic nomination, as anxiety about who will challenge President Donald Trump grows.
But the three septuagenarian candidates are witnessing Buttigieg, a millennial military veteran and mayor from Indiana, cracking into the top tier with a steady rise in the past month, particularly in early-voting states like Iowa where he has seized the momentum.
The 37-year-old technocrat is buoyed by an unruffled campaign demeanor and pragmatic reform proposals that have gained traction in Iowa and New Hampshire, the two states that vote first in the nomination race.
But even as the 10 qualifying candidates prepare to rumble in the fifth nationally televised Democratic debate, the showdown in Atlanta threatens to be overshadowed by impeachment hearings into Trump’s dealings with Ukraine.
The first of nine current or former officials began testifying publicly this week before House investigators who grilled them on what they know about Trump’s alleged coercion efforts.
Democrats accuse Trump of conditioning military aid and a White House meeting on Kiev’s announcing investigations of Biden and his son Hunter, who worked with a Ukrainian energy company while his father was vice president.
Testifying just hours before the debate, Gordon Sondland, ambassador to the European Union, said he was ordered by Trump to seek a deal in which Ukraine would probe Biden in exchange for a White House meeting.
– Democratic anxiety –
With national attention directed at Capitol Hill, the debate run-up has been low-key.
The race itself currently features 17 names after fringe candidate Wayne Messam, mayor of Miramar, Florida, pulled out.
Ten have qualified for Wednesday’s debate: Biden, Warren, Sanders and Buttigieg; senators Kamala Harris, Cory Booker and Amy Klobuchar; entrepreneur Andrew Yang and investor-turned-activist Tom Steyer; and congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard.
The figure is down two from October’s debate. Former congressman Beto O’Rourke dropped out, and Obama-era cabinet member Julian Castro failed to qualify this time.
The field may soon expand again to include billionaire businessman Michael Bloomberg.
The moderate former New York mayor has yet to announce he is in, but he recently filed ballot paperwork in two states, and launched a $100 million online anti-Trump advertising campaign.
Bloomberg’s entry could signal lack of confidence in Biden’s candidacy — and a broader sense of anxiety among Democrats about whether their party will nominate the right candidate to defeat Trump.
Political statistician Nate Silver of FiveThirtyEight.com said Wednesday’s debate is particularly high stakes because it comes “at a dynamic point in the race,” with several candidates rising or falling in polls.
Biden’s floundering campaign could benefit Buttigieg, who occupies the same centrist lane.
Nationally, Buttigieg is in fourth position, according to a RealClearPolitics polling average.
But a new Des Moines Register poll of Iowa voters showed him storming into the lead with 25 percent support, followed by Warren at 16 percent and Biden and Sanders at 15 percent.
And a small survey of New Hampshire voters released Tuesday by St. Anselm College shows Buttigieg shooting to top spot there for the first time, with 25 percent.
That puts Buttigieg, who is openly gay, on course to face targeted attacks from debate rivals.
He has criticized Warren and Sanders for supporting a “Medicare for All” plan for universal health care that would do away with private health insurance.
Buttigieg insists his “Medicare for all who want it” proposal would kick no American off their private health plans while allowing anyone to sign up for affordable government-run coverage.
With 75 days before the Iowa caucuses, significant numbers of voters say they remain undecided.
Speaking last weekend, Buttigieg said he saw a “huge opportunity” to connect with voters as he positions himself as a non-Biden alternative to liberal candidates Warren and Sanders.
Trump 2020 campaign manager Brad Parscale said he expected “another boring debate,” as his team placed ads in local media touting the president’s economic record.
Disclaimer: Validity of the above story is for 7 Days from original date of publishing. Source: AFP.