Baltimore Sun

Second Democratic debate was a wakeup call for Joe Biden

- By Jules Witcover

Thursday night’s Democratic debate was billed by many in advance as a head-to-head clash between the two early 2020 polling frontrunne­rs, former Vice President Joe Biden and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders.

Instead, Mr. Sanders was reduced essentiall­y to an onlooker as Sen. Kamala Harris of California elbowed herself in as Mr. Biden’s prime competitor, the only black candidate on the stage going after his positive reputation on the issue of race.

While recognizin­g Mr. Biden’s record as a civil rights champion, Ms. Harris deftly played a personal card by identifyin­g herself as a young beneficiar­y of school busing in California, which Mr. Biden opposed in his own state of Delaware in 1977.

The ploy drew Mr. Biden’s controlled but obviously jolted reply as a “mischaract­erization” of him. He also rejected her implied allegation that he had tolerated or ignored the segregatio­nist record of Southern Democratic senators with whom he worked on other issues. He noted defensivel­y that he had served as a public defender in his early career as a lawyer.

Ms. Harris’s double whammy at Mr. Biden went to the heart of his current defense as a veteran legislator who valued and continued to advocate reaching across partisan divides to achieve the common good. In so doing, she made a case to be elevated to stature as a serious challenger to the former veep for the 2020 Democratic presidenti­al nomination.

Other Democratic contenders such as Mayor Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Ind., also benignly chipped away at Mr. Biden as a questionab­le voice of generation­al change in the party. His remarks suggested that Mr. Biden at 76 was vulnerable to allegation­s that he doesn’t “get” how social mores have changed in gender relations.

In all, the second night of the Democratic twin bill was a bit of a wake-up call for the early frontrunne­r in the polls. Mr. Biden pushed back against Mr. Sanders’ continued advocacy of Medicare For All, which would replace the Affordable Care act, aka Obamacare. Defending it reinforced his moderate-to-liberal posture on the centerpiec­e legislatio­n of the Obama-Biden administra­tion years.

The first round of multiple candidate debates itself turned out to be cumbersome, for all the even-handed intentions of the sponsoring Democratic National Committee. Hitchhiker­s on the process such as inspiratio­nal speaker Marianne Williamson and technology guru Andrew Yang were fish out of water, and should be fished out before the next round.

Party optics were well served by having three women contenders in the mix for the second night of the first round. But with Massachuse­tts Sen. Elizabeth Warren already cementing her position as a serious entrant and Ms. Harris now enhancing her own in her pivot against Mr. Biden, New York Sen. Kristen Gillibrand may be hard-pressed to survive for the long run.

While I’m at it, I’d like to cast a vote, for what it’s worth, for a similar weeding out of the field of five or more television interrogat­ors of mixed competence as analysts of the 2020 political scene. Some of them seem to fancy themselves as current-day Walter Cronkites, David Brinkleys and John Chancellor­s, but mostly are devoid of the track records for objectivit­y of those past worthies.

The best, or worst, is yet to come in the second and third rounds of these DNC show-and-tells of Democratic presidenti­al wannabees in July and August, with the countdown to state caucuses and primaries to follow early next year.

For the party the prime objective remains removing the yoke of Trumpism on the land, with Joe Biden continuing to argue he is the best person for the job by virtue of his temperamen­t and political experience.

Others, including Mr. Sanders, Ms. Warren and Ms. Harris, are focusing on the ideologica­l and political struggle over the direction of the party, as an increasing­ly vocal progressiv­e wing tugs it increasing­ly to the left. Goals include more and better social services for working men and women of all background­s.

But for now, the fate of the party of FDR, JFK, Bill Clinton and Barack Obama hinges on getting Donald Trump out of the Oval Office.

 ?? BRYNN ANDERSON/AP ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidates Joe Biden, left; Bernie Sanders, center; and Kamala Harris, right, greet the crowd before the Democratic primary debate June 27.
BRYNN ANDERSON/AP Democratic presidenti­al candidates Joe Biden, left; Bernie Sanders, center; and Kamala Harris, right, greet the crowd before the Democratic primary debate June 27.

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