Muscat Daily

US Democrats lock horns over war, gender in Iowa debate

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L-R: Democratic presidenti­al hopefuls Tom Steyer, Elizabeth Warren, Joe Biden, Bernie Sanders, Pete Buttigieg and Amy Klobuchar in the seventh Democratic primary debate of the 2020 presidenti­al campaign season co-hosted by CNN and the Des Moines Register at the Drake University campus in Des Moines, Iowa on Wednesday

Des Moines, US - Leftist Bernie Sanders attacked frontrunne­r Joe Biden on foreign policy on Tuesday but found himself fighting accusation­s of sexism in the final presidenti­al debate before Democrats begin choosing who challenges incumbent Donald Trump in November’s election.

With no candidate yet to carve out a clear lead less than three weeks to go before the first votes in the nomination­s battle, the stakes were high for the six presidenti­al hopefuls on stage in Iowa.

The largely civilised showdown defied earlier expectatio­ns of fireworks, with tensions largely held in check during the two-hour debate.

But a rift between Sanders and fellow Senator Elizabeth Warren appeared to widen afterwards when Warren declined to shake hands with her long-time friend and fellow progressiv­e.

The candidates tangled over everything from troop deployment­s and foreign policy to healthcare, internatio­nal trade, climate change and a woman’s chance of winning the White House.

Sanders (78) assailed former vice president Biden (77) over his vote in support of the 2003 Iraq war as the modern-day tensions in the Middle East dominated the opening exchanges.

With Washington’s conflict with Iran as the backdrop, noninterve­ntionist Sanders drew a sharp contrast, saying that while he opposed an Iraq war that was ‘based on lies’, former vice president Biden trumpeted the effort.

“I thought they were lying,” Sanders said of the Bush administra­tion’s justificat­ions for war in 2002. “I didn’t believe them for a moment. Joe saw it differentl­y.”

Biden said he had long acknowledg­ed the war was ‘a mistake’ but refrained from sparring with Sanders over Iraq.

Instead, Biden appealed for unity in preventing Trump from winning a second term.

“The American character is on the ballot,” Biden said. “Not what Donald Trump is spewing out - the hate, the xenophobia, the racism. That’s not what we are as a nation.”

Each candidate is desperate for a breakout moment that could give them the vital momentum heading into the Iowa caucases on February 3 which begins the presidenti­al primary season.

The four candidates in the top tier - Biden, Sanders, Warren and former South Bend, Indiana mayor Pete Buttigieg - are bunched together in polling. Senator Amy Klobuchar and billionair­e activist Tom Steyer rounded out the debate participan­ts in Iowa’s capital Des Moines.

For months, Sanders and Warren have battled peacefully for the right to wave the campaign’s progressiv­e flag. But their non-aggression pact unravelled in recent days, with Warren endorsing a report that Sanders privately told her he believed a woman could not defeat Trump.

“I didn’t say it,” Sanders insisted at the debate, stressing it was absurd for anyone to think a woman could not win the White House.

 ?? (AFP) ??
(AFP)

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