The Arizona Republic

Pricey fundraiser­s put Buttigieg on defensive in Dems’ LA debate

- Kathleen Ronayne, Michael R. Blood and Steve Peoples

LOS ANGELES – Campaign cash emerged as a new dividing line in the Democratic Party’s high-stakes primary fight on Thursday night as two leading White House hopefuls clashed over how best to beat back President Donald Trump’s sprawling reelection campaign.

Seven candidates shared the stage in Los Angeles in what was their party’s final presidenti­al debate of 2019, but it was Pete Buttigieg, the 37-year-old mayor of South Bend, Indiana, who saw the most incoming fire on the debate stage, particular­ly from Elizabeth Warren, who seized on his reliance on wealthy donors. Another candidate, Amy Klobuchar, challenged his experience in what opened as a tame event but intensifie­d as time went on.

In the most pointed exchange, Warren, a 70-year-old Massachuse­tts senator, zeroed in on Buttigieg’s recent private meeting with wealthy donors inside a California “wine cave,” the details of which were recounted in a recent Associated Press story.

“Billionair­es in wine caves should not pick the next president of the United States,” she charged.

Buttigieg, who has surged into the top tier of the Democratic Party’s 2020 primary in part because of his fundraisin­g success, did not back down.

“We need to defeat Donald Trump,” he responded, noting that Trump’s reelection campaign has already accumulate­d hundreds of millions of dollars. “We shouldn’t try to do it with one hand tied behind our back.”

The clash underscore­d broad questions that loom over the Democratic Party’s 2020 contest just 46 days before primary voting begins: Democrats are not close to unifying behind a message or messenger in their quest to deny Trump a second term.

In fact, as Thursday’s clash revealed, the party is still consumed by a highstakes tug-of-war between feuding factions that must ultimately come together in order to beat Trump next November. One side, led by Warren and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, is demanding transforma­tional change to the U.S. economy and political system. The other, led by former Vice President Joe Biden, Buttigieg and Klobuchar, prefers a more cautious return to normalcy after Trump’s turbulent reign.

Buttigieg, who is polling well in earlyvotin­g states Iowa and New Hampshire, has grappled with questions about his fundraisin­g, an issue that has exposed the fissure between the moderate and progressiv­e wings of the party.

Over just the last week, he hosted wealthy donors at a California wine cave, disclosed consulting work for a big insurance company that preceded layoffs and released a list of wealthy bundlers. His challenges with black voters are well documented, but suddenly, Buttigieg’s corporate connection­s are beginning to alienate the party’s progressiv­e activists.

“I do not sell access to my time,” Warren said of Buttigieg’s aggressive fundraisin­g schedule.

“As of when, Senator?” Buttigieg fired back, referring to Warren’s reliance on wealthy donors before becoming a presidenti­al candidate.

Klobuchar, a Minnesota senator, went after Buttigieg for criticizin­g the combined experience of all the senators who participat­ed in a previous debate.

“So while you can dismiss committee hearings, I think this experience works. And I have not denigrated your experience as a local official – I have been one. I just think you should respect our experience when you look at how you evaluate someone who can get things done.”

Buttigieg responded: “You actually did denigrate my experience, Senator.”

Amid the ideologica­l fight, Democrats faced a pointed challenge related to their need to build a diverse coalition to win the general election. For the first time this primary season, no black or Latino candidate appeared onstage.

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