San Francisco Chronicle

Dems up requiremen­ts for second round of debates

- By Bill Barrow Bill Barrow is an Associated Press writer.

ATLANTA — The Democratic National Committee is upping the ante for its second round of presidenti­al primary debates, doubling the polling and grassroots fundraisin­g requiremen­ts from its initial summer debates.

The parameters, announced Wednesday, are likely to help cull a crop of 24 candidates and, in the process, intensify scrutiny on Democratic Chairman Tom Perez and his pledge to give all candidates a chance to be heard .

The DNC’s outline for its September debate — the third of at least a dozen promised matchups during the 2020 nominating fight — decrees that candidates can participat­e only by reaching 2% in four approved polls released between June 28 and Aug. 28 while also collecting contributi­ons from a minimum of 130,000 unique donors before Aug. 28. That donor list must include a minimum of 400 individual­s in at least 20 states. The qualificat­ions would remain the same for an October debate, though the party hasn’t set the deadline for measuring fundraisin­g and polling.

About a half-dozen candidates have demonstrat­ed the capacity to hit the new marks with relative ease. Several more are on the fence, and perhaps a dozen face an uphill path. Debate slots are a coveted opportunit­y for candidates looking to break from the pack, and not being on the stage could be the death knell for a struggling campaign.

ABC and Univision will host the Sept. 12 debate, with a second night if necessary to accommodat­e the qualified candidates. The September debate site hasn’t been settled. Neither the dates nor location is set for October.

The first debates are June 26-27 in Miami. The second set of debates is on July 30-31 in Detroit. Those first rounds carry a polling threshold of 1% and a fundraisin­g mark of 65,000 donors with a minimum of 200 in at least 20 states.

Perez has yet to lock in the number of podiums for either post-Labor Day debate, but the outline hints at the possibilit­y of significan­tly fewer than the June and July capacity of 20 candidates.

In its announceme­nt, the party states that the second September night would be held only if necessary. When unveiling summer debate plans earlier this year, party officials offered a nominal hedge yet openly predicted they’d fill most if not all the 20 slots.

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