Texarkana Gazette

2016 hopefuls parade on the Sunday morning shows

- By Calvin Woodward

WASHINGTON— Bernie Sanders is itching to debate and not just with other Democrats running for the party’s presidenti­al nomination. He says Democratic and Republican contenders should be debating each other during the primary season, too.

That shakeup is unlikely to happen—each party is planning its own debates, as usual. But the network news shows Sunday morning were something of a debating society of their own as 10 declared and likely candidates from both parties appeared in a parade of political argument and sound bites, touching on ISIS, personal ambition, immigratio­n, hair color and more. A sampling:

BUSH ON THE BIG QUESTION

Is some extraterre­strial force keeping Jeb Bush from announcing a presidenti­al candidacy?

Pressed on CBS’ “Face the Nation,” he spoke as if the decision is not his own.

“I hope I run,” he said. “I hope, I hope, I’m a candidate in the near future.”

What might possibly persuade him not to run? “Who knows?” Bush replied. “I’ve learned not to answer a lot of hypothetic­al questions.”

The former Florida governor said he’ll decide soon after his trip to Europe, which starts in a week.

Bush has been campaignin­g and fundraisin­g for months and the political world would be shocked if he did not enter the Republican nomination race.

There are various reasons politician­s dance around the question of whether they’re running. One big reason: Once they declare their candidacy, they can no longer work directly with super PACs that are raising money to help them.

Bush says he’s already checked with his wife and children they are “totally all in.”

That’s if he runs. As he hopes.

STILL STEAMED

Presidenti­al candidate Sen. Rand Paul certainly raised hackles in his own party when he blamed the rise of the Islamic State group on Republican hawks, and perhaps none has taken more offense than Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal.

Jindal was asked Sunday on ABC whether he would support Paul if the Kentucky senator became the Republican nominee. “I don’t think he will be our party’s nominee,” Jindal said. Jindal is expected to say in coming weeks whether he will join the nomination contest.

Paul said last week that Republican hawks supported the indiscrimi­nate spread of arms in the region where ISIS operates and some of those weapons have fallen into the hands of extremists. That led Jindal to say Paul is unsuited to be president. The governor says ISIS exists purely because of radical Islam.

BRING ON THE DEBATES

“We need a lot more debates in this campaign,” Sanders told NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

The Vermont senator said the Democratic debates should begin as soon as July and, in a twist, some Republican­s should be in the mix.

That’s not the plan. The Democratic Party says it will hold six presidenti­al primary debates with its candidates, beginning in the fall. The first Republican debate will be in August, drawn from a much larger field of rivals.

 ??  ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders waits to speak during a rally with local residents Saturday in Ames, Iowa.
Democratic presidenti­al candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders waits to speak during a rally with local residents Saturday in Ames, Iowa.

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