Chattanooga Times Free Press

Trading body blows

Blackburn and Bredesen take shots at each other in first televised debate

- BY ANDY SHER NASHVILLE BUREAU

LEBANON, Tenn. — Republican Marsha Blackburn and Democrat Phil Bredesen clashed repeatedly here Tuesday night during their first televised U.S. Senate debate in a pivotal Tennessee contest rated as a toss up.

Areas where the Brentwood Congress member Blackburn and Bredesen, a former governor, disagreed included the focus of President Donald Trump’s tax cuts, how the nomination of Brett Kavanaugh to the U.S. Supreme Court should be handled, addressing the U.S. deficit and the opioid epidemic.

Among their few points of agreement: unhappines­s over Trump’s handling of tariffs, although Blackburn voiced hope the president’s strategy would ultimately work.

From her opening statement until the end of the one-hour debate held at Cumberland University, Blackburn aggressive­ly went after Bredesen on issues. And she repeatedly attacked his assertions he would bring to Washington the same pragmatic independen­t-thinking style that he used as governor from 2003 to 2011.

She charged that Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., “personally recruited” Bredesen to run in the contest to succeed retiring Republican Sen. Bob Corker of Chattanoog­a, and that Schumer has “bought and paid for his campaign.”

Bredesen retorted that’s “crazy” to think he would be beholden to his party’s leaders, saying he’s no “political lackey.”

“We need to get new leadership,” he said. “I will tell you right now, that if I’m elected, and when I’m elected and go to Washington, I am not going to be voting for Chuck Schumer.”

He later launched his own attack on Blackburn, saying in his closing remarks that Tennessean­s “certainly are going to have a choice” in the Nov. 6 election. “If what people in Tennessee want is more of that sort of hard-nose politics … then I’m not your guy.

He also described Blackburn as a “person who has spent the last 16 years in Washington, and quite frankly it shows,” he said.

When asked by moderators about Trump’s Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh who is facing charges by two women that he sexually assaulted them either in high school or college, Bredesen said he supports Christine Blasey Ford testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee.

But, he said, the politiciza­tion by both Democrats and Republican­s of the issue “disgusts me” and has transforme­d an “important part of the Senate’s function … and turned it into a circus.”

He said Blackburn

“announced she was voting for Kavanaugh within minutes of him getting appointed.”

Blackburn agreed Ford should be heard — Republican senators plan to let her — but noted that “if I were in the Senate I would vote yes to move Kavanaugh forward and extend that to the floor. He is an eminently qualified jurist.”

“If I were in the Senate, I would vote ‘Yes’ to move the nomination forward,” Blackburn added. “What we see taking place is a PR stunt by the Democrats. It’s a character assassinat­ion. It’s dirty politics at its worst.”

Blackburn criticized Bredesen for his own handling of sexual harassment issues while he was governor, saying reported instances dramatical­ly increased

under his administra­tion and some documents were shredded.

Bredesen defended his administra­tion’s policies, saying the increase was the result of new reporting standards and the documents were put off limits to the public in order to protect complainan­ts.

Asked by moderators about problems with opioids, Bredesen hit Blackburn for co-sponsoring a 2016 law that an investigat­ion by 60 Minutes and The Washington Post said limited the U.S. Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion’s abilities to control pharmaceut­ical companies.

“When she went to Congress 16 years ago she started to get very friendly with big pharmaceut­ical companies and they asked her and she passed this health bill that basically took much of the enforcemen­t ability the DEA had to deal with these issues … away,” he said.

Blackburn said “what he just said is false,” arguing the bill passed both House and Senate “unanimousl­y” and was “bipartisan.”

Bredesen also hit Blackburn for her work in Congress, including for receiving taxpayer-funded health care while working to weaken the Affordable Care Act.

The candidates also quarreled over the 2017 tax cuts passed by the Republican-controlled Congress.

Blackburn began by recalling how Bredesen called Trump’s tax cut “crumbs.” But she argued they have led to great investment, job growth and the lowest unemployme­nt in decades.

“Phil Bredesen has said he would have voted against the tax cuts,” Blackburn said. “Chuck Schumer has bought and paid for his campaign,” a phrase she used more than a dozen times.

Bredesen called the way the legislatio­n was handled “a perfect example of the dysfunctio­n” in Washington. Tax reform is a “great idea,” he said, but added “the reform got put aside” and Republican­s went after the “easy part, the fun part” with corporatio­ns and higher income individual­s benefittin­g most.

Noting that it also adds “substantia­lly to the national debt,” Bredesen touted his own idea to address the national debt, a nineyear freeze on all spending except for Social Security increases.

“It’s something that’s easy to do if Congress has the courage,” he said, jabbing at Blackburn.

Both, however, stressed they were unhappy with Trump’s handling of tariffs, although Blackburn said she hoped Trump’s gambit pays off and believes it already has with Mexico and the European Union.

The debate comes as both candidates as well Republican and Democratic independen­t expenditur­e groups spend millions of dollars to sway voters. Both candidates are vying to succeed Corker, who isn’t seeking a third term.

The contest is seen as fiercely competitiv­e in a red state where only one Democrat, Bredesen, has won a statewide election since 1990.

Bredesen has a narrow lead in two recent national polls and the respected Cook Political Report rates the contest as a toss up and the Real Clear Politics website’s summary of major polls since spring shows support evenly split.

Tuesday’s debate was sponsored by the USA Today Network-Tennessee, NewsChanne­l 5 WTVF-TV, Nashville Public Television, the League of Women Voters of Tennessee and Cumberland University.

The candidates have one more debate, Oct. 10, in Knoxville.

Contact Andy Sher at 615-2550550 or asher@timesfreep­ress. com.

 ?? LACY ATKINS/THE TENNESSEAN VIA AP, POOL ?? Republican Senate candidate Marsha Blackburn, right, listens Tuesday as Democratic candidate Phil Bredesen speaks at the 2018 Tennessee U.S. Senate Debate at Cumberland University in Lebanon, Tenn.
LACY ATKINS/THE TENNESSEAN VIA AP, POOL Republican Senate candidate Marsha Blackburn, right, listens Tuesday as Democratic candidate Phil Bredesen speaks at the 2018 Tennessee U.S. Senate Debate at Cumberland University in Lebanon, Tenn.
 ?? AP PHOTOS/LACY ATKIN ?? Republican candidate Marsha Blackburn, left, and Democratic candidate and former Gov. Phil Bredesen debate Tuesday at Cumberland University.
AP PHOTOS/LACY ATKIN Republican candidate Marsha Blackburn, left, and Democratic candidate and former Gov. Phil Bredesen debate Tuesday at Cumberland University.
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