Dayton Daily News

Trump impact on debate:

- By Sara Burnett and Brian Slodysko

President Trump loomed large over the Democratic debate Tuesday. The candidates mixed their policy plans with political strategy, arguing over whether their party’s leftward push led by Sens. Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren will only open them up to GOP criticism.

— Should Democrats DETROIT be going big or getting real? That’s the question that dominated the Democratic presidenti­al primary debate as progressiv­e favorites Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders fended off attacks from lesser-known moderates. The display amounted to a sometimes testy public airing of the party’s anxieties about how far left is too left and how to beat President Donald Trump. Here are the key takeaways from the debate:

Evolution vs. Revolution

The battle lines were clear at Tuesday’s debate from the opening remarks. This was the pragmatist­s against the front-runners seeking transforma­tional change.

Over and over, moderate candidates like Montana Gov. Steve Bullock, former Colorado Gov. John Hickenloop­er and former Rep. John Delaney argued Massachuse­tts Sen. Elizabeth Warren and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders’ plans — from “Medicare for All” to the Green New Deal — are unrealisti­c and would scare off voters.

Bullock bemoaned the candidates’ “wish-list economics.” Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar dismissed free college even for wealthy families as unworkable and touted her ideas “grounded in reality.”

Hickenloop­er called for “an evolution, not a revolution,” on health care.

The attacks weren’t shocking in a debate that featured the progressiv­e standouts Warren and Sanders onstage with a handful of lesser-known moderates looking to seize the spotlight. But the two senators’ unified front in fighting them off was notable. Though they are jockeying for some of the same voters, Warren and Sanders didn’t bother going after each other. They largely beat back the moderate critique of their call for sweeping, systemic change with similar arguments.

Sanders argued his health plan is “not radical” and achievable. Warren said the country’s problems can’t be solved with “small ideas and spinelessn­ess.”

Playing into Trump’s hands

Donald Trump loomed large over the Democratic debate stage. Repeatedly, the candidates mixed their policy plans with political strategy, arguing over whether their party’s leftward push will only open them up to GOP criticism.

On topics from Medicare for All to immigratio­n, Warren and Sanders found themselves under attack as their more moderate competitor­s told them their policies only played into Trump’s hands.

The notion of taking away private insurance from millions and a Green New Deal that “makes sure that every American’s guaranteed a government job that they want” is “a disaster at the ballot box,” Hickenloop­er said.

“You might as well FedEx the election to Donald Trump,” Hickenloop­er said. Delaney wondered, “Why do we have to be so extreme?” Even self-help author Marianne Williamson chimed in to say she does “have concern about what the Republican­s would say.”

South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg tried to end the unusually public display of anxiety, declaring that “it is time to stop worrying about what the Republican­s will say.”

“If it’s true that if we embrace a far left agenda they’re going to say we’re a bunch of crazy socialists,” Buttigieg said. “If we embrace a conservati­ve agenda, you know what they’re going to do? They’re going to say we’re a bunch of crazy socialists. So let’s just stand up for the right policy, go out there, and defend it.”

Medicare for All takes heat

If the fight was between centrists and progressiv­es, Medicare for All was the weapon.

The early moments of the debate were dominated by a fight over whether Sanders’ plan to eliminate private insurance in favor of a universal government health plan is possible, practical or political suicide.

At times, with Medicare for All supporters Sanders and Warren outnumbere­d, the centrists piled on, raising doubts about the quality of care it could offer, the costs and the disruption to the health care system. Ohio Rep. Tim Ryan called it “bad policy and bad politics.” Bullock said he couldn’t support a plan that “rips away” insurance from Americans who have it.

Sanders, who has spent much of his career on the issue, grew agitated as he defended the plan. The coverage would actually be better, he argued.

“You don’t know that, Bernie,” Ryan interjecte­d.

“I do know,” Sanders fired back. “I wrote the damn bill!”

United against Trump on race

For all the divisions onstage Tuesday, the candidates were unified in rebuking Trump’s racist comments and using race as a campaign theme for 2020.

Trump in recent weeks has told four congresswo­men of color to “go back” to the countries they came from even though they’re all U.S. citizens and has criticized Rep. Elijah Cummings’ Baltimore-area district as a “rat and rodent infested mess.”

“I have had it with the racist attacks,” Klobuchar said in her opening statement.

Sanders said Trump exploited racism. Warren said, “The president is advancing environmen­tal racism, economic racism, criminal justice racism, health care racism.” Warren won strong applause from the Detroit audience when she declared her administra­tion would treat white supremacy as a form of domestic terrorism.

 ?? ERIN SCHAFF / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., speaks next to Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., during the first night of the second round of Democratic presidenti­al debates Tuesday in Detroit.
ERIN SCHAFF / THE NEW YORK TIMES Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., speaks next to Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., during the first night of the second round of Democratic presidenti­al debates Tuesday in Detroit.
 ?? PAUL SANCYA / ASSOCIATED PRESS PAUL SANCYA / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Author Marianne Williamson criticized the party’s drift to the left. South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg says Democrats needn’t fear GOP attacks.
PAUL SANCYA / ASSOCIATED PRESS PAUL SANCYA / ASSOCIATED PRESS Author Marianne Williamson criticized the party’s drift to the left. South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg says Democrats needn’t fear GOP attacks.

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