USA TODAY US Edition

Dem contest tightens beyond coveted Iowa

Biden leads Nevada poll, but Sanders is on his heels

- Susan Page

It’s not just Iowa: An exclusive Suffolk University/USA TODAY Poll of Nevada shows another early-voting state where the Democratic presidenti­al race is tightening, former Vice President Joe Biden is struggling to hold frontrunne­r status and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders is showing strength.

As Democratic contenders prepare to debate Tuesday in Des Moines – the final debate before the opening caucuses in Iowa – the field is shrinking and the race may be heading toward a showdown between a familiar centrist and a firebrand liberal who represent starkly different choices for the party.

In Nevada, the third state on the calendar, the new survey shows Biden leading Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders by a single percentage point, 19%-18%. Massachuse­tts Sen. Elizabeth Warren is third at 11%.

Some of the same dynamics were apparent in a Des Moines Register/CNN

Iowa Poll released Friday. Sanders held his first lead in the iconic survey, at 20%, followed by Warren at 17%, Pete Buttigieg at 16% and Biden at 15%. In both states, the second-tier candidates seemed to be having trouble breaking through.

In Nevada, Biden has dropped by 9 points and Warren by 7 points from the average of recent statewide polls calculated by RealClearP­olitics.com. Sanders’ support has proven steadier, dipping by 2 points. No other candidate has broken into double digits in the Silver State.

“Looking at the totality of the data, you’d have to say that Biden, Sanders and Warren are in a tier of their own,” said veteran Democratic pollster Mark Mellman. But, he added, “it’s late to say it’s early, but there’s still time for things to happen. What happens in Iowa and what happens in New Hampshire will affect what happens in Nevada.”

With the opening Iowa caucuses just three weeks away, the Democratic contest is heading into a rollercoas­ter seven weeks that could well determine the Democratic nominee who will face President Donald Trump. The Feb. 3 caucuses are followed by the New Hampshire primary on Feb. 11, the Nevada caucuses on Feb. 22 and the South Carolina primary on Feb. 29. Super Tuesday contests on March 3 will then chose a third of the delegates needed to claim the nomination at the Democratic National Convention in July.

The calendar could raise the stakes for the Des Moines Register/CNN debate, which will have six contenders on stage. “Every candidate will be looking for that ‘breakout moment’ to generate momentum,” predicted David Paleologos, director of the Suffolk University Political Research Center, although he noted that in the past any post-debate bumps have been short-lived. “To date, we have only seen mini-moves of candidates spiking after debates, to be followed by a settling back to the same frontrunne­rs that we’ve had all along.”

The average of recent polls in New Hampshire show the same four contenders clustered at the top: Sanders at 21.5%, Biden at 18.8%, Buttigieg at 18.3% and Warren at 14.8%. That quartet plus Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar and environmen­tal activist Tom Steyer qualified for the Tuesday debate.

In the Nevada survey, Buttigieg, the former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, and Steyer were at 8%. Entreprene­ur Andrew Yang and Klobuchar were at 4%. Another 22% were undecided.

Biden and Sanders showed strength not only in leading the pack but also in the loyalty of their supporters, who by nearly 2-1 were committed to sticking with them. Two-thirds of their backers said their minds were firmly made up. But among supporters of Warren and Buttigieg, nearly six in 10 said they might change their minds.

The candidate with the most fervent support was Yang. Among his backers, 73% said their minds were made up; just 18% said they might change them. (Put another way, only four of his 16 supporters said they might switch to someone else.)

The poll of 500 likely Democratic caucusgoer­s, taken by landline and cellphone Wednesday through Saturday, has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.4 percentage points.

Meanwhile, the record-size Democratic field continues to shrink. New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker, who was at 2% in the Nevada poll, withdrew from the presidenti­al contest Monday. In recent weeks, California Sen. Kamala Harris, former Housing secretary Julian Castro and Marianne Williamson also have pulled out, saying they saw no realistic path to the Democratic nomination. That leaves the Democratic field without an African American or Hispanic contender, a potential concern for a party that counts minorities among its core supporters.

Asked for their second choices, 21% of those surveyed in Nevada picked Warren, 19% picked Biden, 12% picked Sanders and 10% picked Buttigieg.

Those findings may raise a red flag for Sanders. While he is essentiall­y tied with Biden as a first choice, Biden and Warren are better positioned to pick up support if and when other candidates drop out.

Those who picked Biden as their first choice were inclined to support Warren as their second choice. Sanders’ supporters also were inclined to back Warren. Warren’s supporters divided between Sanders and Biden. Buttigieg’s supporters divided between Biden and Warren. Steyer’s supporters went to Biden.

One more prospect: Former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg. A late-starting candidate, he hasn’t been certified for the Nevada caucuses. But the millions of dollars he has spent on TV ads nationwide haven’t gone unnoticed. A 55% majority of the likely caucus-goers in Nevada say they’ve seen them.

When it came to the issues that mattered, three dominated the others from a long list: health care, chosen by 22%, climate change by 14% and the economy by 10%.

 ?? CHRIS CARLSON/AP ?? Democratic candidates Joe Biden, left, and Bernie Sanders face off in the presidenti­al primary debate Dec. 19 in Los Angeles.
CHRIS CARLSON/AP Democratic candidates Joe Biden, left, and Bernie Sanders face off in the presidenti­al primary debate Dec. 19 in Los Angeles.

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