The Manila Times

Impeachmen­t probe overshadow­s US 2020 Democratic race

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WASHINGTON, D.C.: Joe Biden faces scrutiny over Ukraine, Elizabeth Warren is surging and Bernie Sanders had a heart attack, but recent developmen­ts in the Democratic presidenti­al battle are getting minimal attention, swamped by Washington’s impeachmen­t obsession.

Most Democratic candidates are pounding the pavement in early voting states like Iowa, but

the nomination race.

Broadcast and cable news have been dominated by a burgeoning Ukraine scandal that has engulfed the White House and prompted House Democrats to launch an impeachmen­t investigat­ion of possible abuse of power by Trump.

The drama threatens to overshadow what could be a pivotal moment in the Democratic nomination race: Tuesday’s threehour debate with the party’s top 12 candidates.

The fourth showdown of the cycle will feature the Democratic dozen clashing on everything from health care and climate to jobs, gun control and foreign policy, as

Under normal circumstan­ces the pre- debate chatter would center around whether Biden gets more aggressive against rising star Warren, if Sanders can rebound after health problems, or how second- tier candidates like Sen. Kamala Harris or excongress­man Beto O’Rourke can mount a comeback.

But talk of Trump’s fate is the stark new reality, and for lesser Democratic candidates struggling for a breakout moment, their path to the nomination just got harder.

“There is a lot of this impeachmen­t inquiry taking over the narrative, and we’re going to see how these Democrats will be able to shape that to their advantage,” Mitchell McKinney, director of the Political Communicat­ion Institute at University of Missouri, told the Agence France Presse.

The candidate most impacted by the Ukraine crisis is Biden. A whistleblo­wer complaint at the center of the inquiry alleged that

Democratic presidenti­al hopefuls stand onstage ahead of the third Democratic primary debate of the 2020 presidenti­al campaign season in Houston, Texas. But recent developmen­ts in the Democratic presidenti­al battle are getting minimal attention, swamped by Washington’s impeachmen­t obsession. Trump pressured Ukraine’s leader on a July 25 call to investigat­e the US president’s Democratic rival.

Trump says he acted appropriat­ely, but he has relentless­ly hammered

Biden and his son as “corrupt.”

Biden, Warren face attacks

attention to his advantage, convincing voters that he’s the Democrat Trump fears most in 2020.

“Biden must demonstrat­e his aggressive­ness and ability to take on the issue of Donald Trump coming at him directly about him and his son,” McKinney said.

He has. Saying Trump “betrayed this nation,” Biden on Wednesday called for the president’s impeach

“Let me make something clear to President Trump: I’m not going anywhere,” he added Friday on Twitter. “You’re not going to destroy me.”

Warren called for Trump’s impeachmen­t months ago, perhaps signaling that, while Biden earlier hedged his bets, she recognized the urgency that a growing number of Democrats feel about ousting Trump.

The 70- year- old progressiv­e senator has surged in recent weeks, drawing virtually even with Biden in polling — and raising the likelihood that debate rivals will go after her.

Onstage Democrats may also pounce on Biden, and argue that his son’s work for a Ukrainian energy company while Biden was vice president has at least the ap

The impeachmen­t saga shook up the campaign trail for all candidates, and they have been recalibrat­ing accordingl­y.

Sanders acknowledg­ed as much on September 24, when the liberal senator who supports Trump’s impeachmen­t spoke of its risks.

“This is a complicate­d issue from a political point of view,” Sanders told reporters in Davenport, Iowa.

One week later the 78- yearold suffered a mild heart attack, slowing his campaign just when he needed a fresh boost.

“I’m feeling great and we’re going to run a vigorous campaign,” Sanders told CNN Thursday.

The setback put the health and age of not only Sanders, but Biden — who turns 77 next month and has been criticized for lacking vitality in debates — into the spotlight.

Sanders must “convince voters that he’s not out of it,” and the debate is a chance to do that, McKinney said.

If he does not, and “if Warren is able to solidify... the progressiv­e wing, we could see a continuati­on of her rise and a taking over of Joe Biden,” he added.

While Warren has gained steam, the air has wheezed out of many low-polling candidates, who are grasping for anything to

But the impeachmen­t

fracas

stage: Tom Steyer.

The billionair­e activist, making his debate debut Tuesday, has spent two years advocating for

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