Santa Fe New Mexican

Front-runners face scrutiny at debate

- By Steve Peoples

WESTERVILL­E, Ohio — Joe Biden is facing baseless — but persistent— allegation­s of wrongdoing overseas that could undermine his argument that he’s best positioned to defeat the president. Bernie Sanders is recovering from a heart attack that raised questions about his ability to withstand the vigor of a presidenti­al campaign. And Elizabeth Warren is fending off new scrutiny of her biography.

A dozen Democratic presidenti­al candidates will meet Tuesday for the most crowded presidenti­al debate in modern history. But it’s the three leading candidates — Biden, Sanders and Warren — who face the most intense spotlight that could expose glaring liabilitie­s in their quest for the White House.

The debate marks the first time the candidates will meet since the House moved forward with an impeachmen­t inquiry against President Donald Trump. While they are united on that issue, the debate will again expose a political party struggling to coalesce around a unifying message or messenger with the first primary contest just over three months away. The event, hosted by CNN and the New York Times, will be held in Ohio, a state that has long helped decide presidenti­al elections but has drifted away from Democrats in recent years.

The White House hopefuls will represent the political and personal diversity that has come to define the Democratic Party of 2019: four women, four people of color, an openly gay man and an age range that spans four decades.

Sanders, a Vermont senator, will be under pressure to prove he has the physical and mental stamina to stand on a podium for three hours less than two weeks after suffering a heart attack. Age was already a concern for the 78-year-old even before he was taken to a Nevada hospital earlier this month and had two stents put in to clear a clogged artery in his heart.

Sanders and his allies insist the health scare has only strengthen­ed his commitment to the 2020 contest — and his case for his signature health care plan, “Medicare for All.” Sanders plans to note, as he has in recent days, that millions of Americans without health insurance could have been forced into bankruptcy — or worse — under the same circumstan­ces.

“Bernie is a political marathon runner,” said Sanders’ confidante RoseAnn DeMoro, the former executive director of National Nurses United. “I think the debate is going to be a great reassuranc­e to the public.”

The stakes are also high for Warren, Sanders’ ideologica­l ally, who stands on the debate stage for the first time as a front-runner, a status that makes her a top target of rivals in both political parties.

Biden, 76, and others have jabbed her intense focus on detailed liberal policies that may be difficult to implement with a divided Congress. South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg has highlighte­d the absence of a specific Warren health care plan; she has embraced Sanders’ single-payer plan instead.

Republican­s, meanwhile, have raised questions about whether Warren, 70, was actually forced from her teaching job because of a pregnancy nearly a half century ago, a claim that has become a core part of her personal message. Critics have pointed to past speeches and documents that suggest she left on her own. Warren is standing by her story.

The issue is particular­ly threatenin­g because it’s not the first time she has been accused of embellishi­ng her biography. Warren, a Massachuse­tts senator, has already apologized for claiming Native American heritage decades ago. While a DNA test showed distant tribal ancestry, it also sparked a rebuke of Warren from some Native Americans for attributin­g tribal membership to genetics.

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