Yuma Sun

Biden, Buttigieg amplify Sanders criticism ahead of Iowa vote

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WAUKEE, Iowa — Pete Buttigieg and Joe Biden stepped up their criticisms of Bernie Sanders on Thursday, as moderates are under growing pressure to dull any momentum the progressiv­e senator may gain heading into next week’s Iowa caucuses.

Biden, a former vice president, was blunt when asked by reporters to contrast himself with Sanders, who has long identified as a democratic socialist and was elected as an independen­t senator from Vermont.

“I’m a Democrat,” Biden told reporters. “He’s not a registered Democrat, to the best of my knowledge. And Bernie has a different view — I mean everything I’ve suggested to you that I want to do, I’ve figured out how to pay for it.”

Sanders signed a loyalty pledge with the party last year that acknowledg­es he’s a member of the Democratic Party and would serve as one if elected president.

Buttigieg, meanwhile, bemoaned Sanders’ demands for adherence to progressiv­e ideals as “a kind of politics that says you’ve got to go all the way here and nothing else counts.”

The tougher talk comes as a greater urgency sets in among moderates in the race to prevent Sanders from notching early wins in Iowa and New Hampshire. That could give him momentum heading into later contests that will decide who wins the Democratic nomination.

The pressure is mounting as moderates struggle to unite behind a clear standard-bearer. While Biden remains atop the field in many national polls, his support has slipped some in the early voting states.

Buttigieg and Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar, who have framed themselves as Midwestern consensus builders, have had bigger crowds than Biden across Iowa over the past week and believe they have an opportunit­y to peel off some of his support.

As the moderates struggle to coalesce, they’re also attacking each other, increasing­ly turning the Democratic primary into a multi-pronged battle.

In addition to his critique of Sanders, Buttigieg dismissed what he characteri­zed as Biden’s assertion that it’s not time to “take a risk on someone new.” That’s an implicit argument that the 38-yearold former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, doesn’t have the experience needed to be president.

“History has shown us that the biggest risk we could take with a very important election coming up is to look to the same Washington playbook and recycle the same arguments and expect that to work against a president like Donald Trump, who is new in kind,” Buttigieg said.

Biden began the day focused on contrastin­g himself mostly against Trump, arguing, “I don’t believe we are the dark, angry nation that Donald Trump sees in his tweets in the middle of the night.”

But he couldn’t ignore his Democratic rivals entirely. He later issued a warning to voters, saying “we can’t let this Democratic race slide into a negative treatment of one another.”

“We have difference­s,” Biden continued. “We can argue about these difference­s. We have to be able, when we come out of this, to unite the party.”

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