Business World

Sanders-Warren clash on women elevates acrimony in Iowa debate

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BERNIE SANDERS and Elizabeth Warren tried unsuccessf­ully to calm the waters Tuesday after a spat involving elitism, sexism and insinuatio­ns of lying, in a widerangin­g debate where the top candidates each enjoyed strong moments without yielding a clear winner.

The clash between the progressiv­es looms over a tight race 20 days before the Iowa caucuses after a recent Des Moines Register/CNN survey showed Mr. Sanders, Ms. Warren, Joe Biden and Pete Buttigieg bunched up in a fivepoint spread at the front of the field.

It was hard to see how anyone on stage at Drake University in Des Moines dramatical­ly bettered their position heading into the Feb. 3 Iowa caucuses. That’s good news for Mr. Sanders, who led one key Iowa poll, and Mr. Biden, who topped a second survey. Ms. Warren and Mr. Buttigieg, struggling to gain altitude in Iowa, held their own with crisp performanc­es while taking some hits from rivals.

When moderators raised the Sanders-Warren dispute, the uncomforta­ble smiles from the two candidates captured the feelings of many progressiv­es who want the two to work together to block a moderate like Mr. Biden from winning the nomination.

But both held to their contradict­ory stories about what happened in a private 2018 meeting between them. Mr. Sanders insisted he “didn’t say” a woman couldn’t win the presidency in 2020. Ms. Warren said she “disagreed” when Mr. Sanders told her that, before trying to pivot away by saying, “Bernie is my friend, and I’m not here to fight with Bernie.”

Neither of the two wanted to prolong the topic, and yet it framed the early part of the debate and allowed each of the candidates — four men and two women — to lay out their cases to become the nominee. The spat dredged up old hostilitie­s among mainstream Democratic figures who believe Mr. Sanders damaged Hillary Clinton in 2016 and potentiall­y cost her the election.

The tension between the two was evident afterward when Ms. Warren walked up to Mr. Sanders to talk, but declined to shake his hand when he offered it.

”Bernie should have let this go,” former Clinton 2016 aide Jennifer Palmieri wrote on Twitter. She later added: “What we will likely remember most from this night is @ewarren and her well litigated exchange with @BernieSand­ers on electabili­ty. This is very tricky terrain for women candidates and she came out the winner.”

President Donald Trump sought to fuel the divisions as he held a rally in Milwaukee at the same time as the debate. “She said that Bernie said a woman can’t win,” he said. “I don’t believe that Bernie said that. I really don’t. It’s not the kind of a thing he’d say.”

And Ms. Warren tried to seize the moment to make her case to lead a majority-female party.

“Look at the men on this stage — collective­ly they have lost 10 elections. The only people on this stage who have won every election they’ve run in are the women,” she said, drawing heavy applause and referring to herself and Senator Amy Klobuchar. Tom Steyer completed the six-person debate stage.

The spat caused Mr. Sanders supporters to light up Twitter this week with the anti-Warren hashtags #RefundWarr­en and #ITrustBern­ie. It was clear Tuesday those animositie­s would linger.

“Who does Warren think she will win over with this sexism attack on Sanders? I can promise you she has just rendered herself completely unacceptab­le to most Sanders supporters,” progressiv­e commentato­r Krystal Ball tweeted during the debate.

OTHER DEMOCRATS HAD A DIFFERENT VIEW “It’s not just about what may or may not have been said in this conversati­on. Bernie came into this race with a bit of a legacy — the Bernie Bros were known to have been horrible to women online,” Karen Finney, a former Clinton 2016 aide, said on CNN before the debate Tuesday, using a pejorative to describe Mr. Sanders’ most fervent backers.

“The Bernie Bros, again — they’re pretty obnoxious. And they’re very sexist and misogynist­ic,” she said, adding that there are “a lot of women feeling pretty raw from 2016.”

Charles Chamberlai­n, the chair of the liberal group Democracy for America, pleaded with the two to play nice.

“Especially given how close the race remains just 20 days ahead of the first contest, it’s critical that progressiv­es focus our fight for the Democratic nomination against candidates supported by the corporate wing, instead of fighting each other,” he said in a statement issued in the middle of the debate. —

 ??  ?? DEMOCRATIC 2020 US presidenti­al candidates (left to right) Senator Elizabeth Warren speaks with Senator Bernie Sanders as billionair­e activist Tom Steyer listens after the seventh Democratic 2020 presidenti­al debate at Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa, Jan. 14.
DEMOCRATIC 2020 US presidenti­al candidates (left to right) Senator Elizabeth Warren speaks with Senator Bernie Sanders as billionair­e activist Tom Steyer listens after the seventh Democratic 2020 presidenti­al debate at Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa, Jan. 14.

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