The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

In Democrat debates’ galaxy, women come out as the stars

- Kathleen Parker Kathleen Parker Columnist

By now, the winners and losers of the first Democratic presidenti­al debate(s) have been thoroughly hashed, roasted and served up overdone.

Bottom line: Women won. Sens. Kamala Harris, Elizabeth Warren and Amy Klobuchar all made strong showings, outshining most in the majority-male lineup. Harris was the undisputed winner owing to her dramatic confrontat­ion with former Vice President Joe Biden over his history with race and busing.

But the key to understand­ing who won or lost isn’t what profession­al pundits think, as Tom Brokaw noted Friday on MSNBC’S “Morning Joe.” It’s what the folks are talking about in coffee shops and hair salons in places such as, it just so happens, South Carolina.

In politics, it always matters what the former secessioni­st state is thinking. Not only does South Carolina hold the first primaries for both parties in the South, but it’s often a bellwether of the nation’s presidenti­al voting.

More important, this fascinatin­g if largely misunderst­ood state is the nation’s petri dish — a diverse laboratory where America’s sins and deepest longings comingle in a tempest of love, hate, pride, resentment, atonement, forgivenes­s and, yes, resurrecti­on.

Katon Dawson, a former state Republican Party chairman, once told me that he checks the political temperatur­e by talking to people at the Lizard’s Thicket, a popular Columbia restaurant among the grits-and-biscuit crowd. Which is to say, everybody. When Republican Nikki Haley was running for governor in 2010 and a couple of men claimed to have engaged in extramarit­al relations with her, Dawson got his intel at a dry cleaners. He knew Haley would survive when two women working there told him they didn’t know — or care — if the stories were true. Haley strongly denied both.

One of my own favorite stopovers for political insight is Camden Antiques Market, a destinatio­n shop/social meeting place here for dealers, collectors and random others who enjoy the company of owner Patricia Richardson, an erstwhile New Yorker and independen­t voter.

When I popped in after the first debate, she reduced her impression­s to a single scenario: “I try to picture each one of them sitting across from Kim Jong Un and I ask myself, who would do best? That’s all I care about, and most didn’t qualify.”

Hers is a rational perspectiv­e, and yet, little time was dedicated to foreign policy last Wednesday and Thursday.

Among the contenders who have polled in the upper tier, Biden is most experience­d in the internatio­nal arena. But his debate performanc­e — seemingly confused and tentative at times — created new doubts about his sturdiness for the top job. TThe same night, Mayor Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Indiana, gave a decent answer about China, noting that the communist nation is “using technology for the perfection of dictatorsh­ip,” and he countered Trump’s approach with a plea for greater investment in domestic competitiv­eness. When the Wednesday field was asked if they’d re-enter the Iran deal, all but one (New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker) raised their hands, including that evening’s handsdown winner, former Housing and Urban Developmen­t Secretary Julian Castro.

Notwithsta­nding Richardson’s keen observatio­n, the most important question remains: Who can beat Donald Trump? The convention­al wisdom that Biden could is no longer so obvious. On the other hand, Harris showed through her skirmish with the elder statesman that she’s fearless and sharp and won’t back down — presumably whether faced with a bully named Trump, Putin or Kim.

The night is very young, but my best prediction (until next time) would be a Harris-Buttigieg or a Harris-Castro ticket. Either combo would be formidable, smart, fresh, telegenic, classy, well-spoken and — a relief.

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