Los Angeles Times

Sanders, Warren feud may reshape the race

As supporters of both progressiv­e candidates tangle, the biggest beneficiar­y could be Biden, analysts say.

- By Mark Z. Barabak and Janet Hook

With a pointed snub — a refusal to shake Bernie Sanders’ hand on the debate stage — Elizabeth Warren escalated a feud on the political left that threatens to harm both candidates and undermine their common cause in the final days before the presidenti­al balloting begins in Iowa.

Supporters of the two Democratic hopefuls hurled insults and fresh attacks Wednesday while progressiv­e leaders sought to bring about peace, fearing an outcome — the elevation of a comparativ­e moderate like Joe Biden — that none of the antagonist­s wish to see.

“Every minute spent talking about the drama between these two people might end up with a Democratic nominee worse for millions of people,” said Adam Green, a Warren supporter who is co-founder of the Progressiv­e Change Campaign Committee. “Both sides know that.”

The two campaigns declined to comment and neither candidate spoke publicly about their dispute, Warren’s cold shoulder or the rising tensions between backers of the two U.S. senators. At issue is whether Sanders questioned Warren’s electabili­ty as a woman running for president.

In the aftermath of Tuesday’s debate, where the two largely muted their disagreeme­nt, the candidates’ brusque encounter was striking.

Sanders supporters immediatel­y flooded Twitter with images likening Warren to a snake. Warren defenders hurled back charges of misogyny, an accusation that plagued Sanders’ 2016 campaign against Hillary Clinton. Those caught between them despaired.

“We have a primary to win and a White House to take

back and progressiv­es cannot do that if we’re punching at each other,” said Rebecca Katz, a Democratic strategist who supported Sanders over Clinton but now backs Warren. (“I still love Bernie,” she hastened to add.)

There has been a strong effort on the left to keep the competitio­n between the two from becoming acrimoniou­s, and both candidates were amenable. For months, on the debate stage and off, they repeatedly passed up opportunit­ies to criticize each other, or even seek much separation.

There was a strategic purpose to their entente. Many Sanders supporters have said Warren is their second choice, and vice versa, which gave them incentive to make nice in the event one dropped from the race.

What is more, officials in both campaigns argued the progressiv­e movement is better off having both in the field, the better to amplify their shared agenda and tip the balance away from the party’s more moderate wing. If no candidate has a majority of delegates heading into this summer’s nomination convention, the thinking went, Warren and Sanders may have enough for progressiv­es to choose the party’s nominee.

The New England neighbors — Sanders from Vermont, Warren from Massachuse­tts — are not just friends but political and ideologica­l soulmates. They scoff at opponents like Biden who advocate less drastic change and together push for policies that would move the country sharply to the left.

After growing animosity that started last weekend, supporters dreaded the prospect of the two clawing at each other on a national debate stage. They were relieved when Warren avoided directly confrontin­g Sanders over a statement he allegedly made during a private 2018 meeting that a woman could not win the White House. Sanders insisted he said no such thing.

Immediatel­y after the debate, however, Warren approached Sanders and declined to shake his hand. The two then engaged in a brief but animated discussion that was captured and played repeatedly on cable television and social media.

“I think you called me a liar on national TV,” Warren said, according to footage aired Wednesday night on CNN, a debate co-sponsor.

“You called me a liar,” Sanders replied. “You told me ... all right, let’s not do it now.”

The danger is that animositie­s between the candidates, and especially their supporters, could end up hurting both and helping other candidates. The likeliest beneficiar­y would appear to be Biden, who is leading national polls and effectivel­y running even with Sanders and Warren in Iowa, which casts the first votes of the campaign on Feb. 3.

“Democracy for America has very intimate knowledge of this,” said the group’s communicat­ions director, Neil Sroka. The liberal organizati­on is an offshoot of Howard Dean’s unsuccessf­ul 2004 presidenti­al campaign, which foundered when a feud with another candidate in the tightly bunched Iowa pack opened a path for John F. Kerry to beat them both.

The group had already been working on a statement about the importance of progressiv­e unity in the days before the campaigns started sniping at each other, Sroka said. Those efforts intensifie­d Wednesday, with several organizati­ons combining to draft a proposed peace treaty.

“This is the moment it is critically important for campaigns to take that back a little bit,” Sroka said. “Neither of the campaigns benefit from what has gone on in the 48 hours prior to the debate or the continuati­on of anything like that today.”

Despite the candidates’ good will, hostilitie­s between their supporters have been building for some time.

Until recently, that friction had largely centered around die-hard Sanders supporters questionin­g Warren’s credential­s as a left-wing progressiv­e, an assertion that may be puzzling to those less inclined to ideologica­l parsing.

Critics have cited Warren’s descriptio­n of herself as a “capitalist to my bones,” her past registrati­on as a Republican and the relative affluence of her supporters compared to those backing Sanders.

The discussion has largely been confined to activists on social media or the pages of left-wing media rather than the town halls and rallies where Sanders and Warren have been grinding for votes.

Now the skepticism of Warren “has gotten much, much worse” because Sanders supporters believe that Warren’s campaign has attacked her erstwhile ally by “accusing him of trashing her and saying a woman can’t be president,” said Nathan J. Robinson, editor of the socialist magazine Current Affairs.

Warren supporters, in turn, complain that Sanders has not done enough to rein in his more combative and belligeren­t backers.

“His silence speaks volumes,” said Claire Celsi, an Iowa state senator who has endorsed Warren. “I know Bernie can’t control all of his followers, that’s impossible. But he can tell everyone to stick to the facts, keep your head up and let’s not slip into the gutter.”

Of course, strong passions are nothing new to political campaigns, even among those who share a party and the same broad philosophy.

Mike Lux, a veteran Democratic strategist, said “overzealou­s supporters are always a problem,” with the excesses amplified today by the outrage-filled megaphone of social media. Lux, a Warren supporter, said the harsh words and hurt feelings of supporters were less important than what the principals say and do.

“At the end of the day,” Lux said, “how the candidates and campaigns comport themselves is what’s important.”

As it happens, Sanders and Warren will be spending the next few weeks practicall­y side by side as the impeachmen­t trail of President Trump takes place in the Senate. Their desks in the chamber are just a few seats apart.

Sanders’ wife and political advisor defended her husband’s integrity and sought to tamp down the dispute. “I think that this discussion is over,” Jane O’Meara Sanders told the Associated Press.

That remains to be seen.

 ?? Scott Olson Getty Images ?? ELIZABETH WARREN, Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders in the Democratic debate in Des Moines on Tuesday.
Scott Olson Getty Images ELIZABETH WARREN, Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders in the Democratic debate in Des Moines on Tuesday.

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