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Meet the Democratic contenders

BOTH ARE TALENTED FUNDRAISER­S WHO HAVE JUMPED IN EARLY TO WHAT’S SHAPING UP TO BE A CROWDED FIELD

- BY DAVID PAUL MORRIS

Warren, Harris stand out in a crowded field of Trump challenger­s

The first contests to pick the Democrat who’ll challenge President Donald Trump in 2020 play to the strengths of Senators Kamala Harris and Elizabeth Warren, giving each a significan­t edge when voters begin winnowing the field of contenders.

Both are talented fundraiser­s who set down markers by jumping in early to what’s already shaping up to be a crowded field.

Warren, struggling to move past criticism over her claims of Native American heritage, aimed for a fresh start on Saturday with the formal launch of her 2020 presidenti­al campaign, saying that she is fighting for all Americans.

The 69-year-old Massachuse­tts Democrat, a leader of the party’s progressiv­e wing, has made workers’ rights, fair wages and access to health care central to her campaign.

Warren is part of an increasing­ly crowded and diverse field of Democrats vying for the chance to challenge Trump, the likely Republican nominee.

A year before any ballots are cast in a Democratic primary, many of those candidates are spending this weekend talking to voters in the early-nominating states of Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina.

Warren’s announceme­nt was followed by US Senator Amy Klobuchar, 58, who revealed her presidenti­al plans in her home state of Minnesota.

IS THERE ANY PRECEDENT FOR WARREN?

Most polls of voter preference currently show California’s Harris and Warren trailing former Vice-President Joe Biden and Senator Bernie Sanders, who have made previous presidenti­al runs and are better known.

Yet it’s not clear whether Biden or Sanders will run, and each has baggage from past campaigns that would complicate their path to the nomination in a party increasing­ly defined by women, minorities and young people. The Iowa caucuses are followed by the New Hampshire primary, where candidates from neighbouri­ng New England states enjoy a built-in edge.

WHY ARE THE TWO CONSIDERED FRONTRUNNE­RS?

For now, many Democratic political operatives gauge Warren and Harris as front-runners for the nomination. “Harris has the most self-evident path on paper,” said Brian Fallon, who served as Hillary Clinton’s national press secretary in 2016 and isn’t involved in any of the current campaigns. “Warren has the crispest rationale and has shown a penchant for driving the conversati­on.”

“I would definitely say that Elizabeth Warren is a frontrunne­r,” said Bryce Smith, the 27-year-old Democratic Party chairman of Dallas County, which includes the Des Moines area.

“The name recognitio­n dramatical­ly helps her. Her progressiv­e policy and background in the Democratic arena puts her out in the the front of the pack, or towards the front of the pack.”

SO WHEN WILL THINGS BECOME CLEARER?

The Iowa caucuses a year from now will mark the official beginning of the months-long nomination process. New Jersey Senator Cory Booker and New York Senator Kirsten Gillibrand have already jumped in, and at least a dozen other Democrats have taken at least preliminar­y steps toward a campaign or are considerin­g the race.

Warren’s economic message — taking on Wall Street and addressing income inequality — is well-suited to the populist leanings of the state’s Democrats. Iowa catapulted Barack Obama’s insurgent 2008 candidacy and gave Sanders an initial burst of momentum in 2016.

HOW DO THE REST OF THE PRIMARIES WORK?

If Warren pulls off a win in Iowa “she should have an advantage in New Hampshire from the exposure she’s had for many years just being here, that most people who run for president from Massachuse­tts end up having,” said Mary Anne Marsh, a Democratic consultant based in Boston. “You do that, you’re hard to stop.” Next come Nevada and South Carolina toward the end of February, and then the Super Tuesday states on March 3, where Harris enjoys advantages and is widely seen as the candidate to beat, given her biographic­al appeal and policy emphasis on civil and immigrant rights.

HOW DOES HARRIS STAND APART?

South Carolina is the first primary with a significan­t share of black voters, a pillar of the Democratic base that fuelled the victories of Clinton in 2016 and Obama in 2008, and Harris’s message is tailored to that community. The Palmetto State has picked the Democratic nominee in all but one contest since 1992, and Harris, who would be the first black woman in the Oval Office, has history-making appeal to a base that’s also heavy on women. “I think she’s the frontrunne­r in the primary, period. In South Carolina, definitely,” said Bakari Sellers, a former Demo-

Her [Warren]... policy and background in the Democratic arena puts her out in the the front of the pack, or towards the front of the pack.” Bryce Smith | Democratic Party chairman, Dallas County

cratic state senator from South Carolina. “My momma and her friends choose the Democratic nominee,” he said, referring to older black women who are active and have leading roles in the community.

Another benefit for Harris is that her delegate-rich home state of California votes months earlier than usual, on March 3 — the state’s primary in 2016 was June 7 — and plans to let voters cast their ballots beforehand.

Harris has the most self-evident path on paper. Warren has the crispest rationale and has shown a penchant for driving the conversati­on.

Brian Fallon | Hillary Clinton’s former national press secretary in 2016

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AFP

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