Moderate Democrats use debate to attack liberal rivals over Trump
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[August 01, 2019]
By Amanda Becker
DETROIT (Reuters) - Moderate candidates
forced their way into the debate conversation on Tuesday night by
assailing as "political suicide" the agenda championed by liberal
front-runners who have dominated the 2020 Democratic presidential
primary race.
It was the moment in the spotlight the more centrist contenders in the
crowded field had been waiting for as they try to break into the top
tier. But in their push to stem the party's leftward lurch, they spent
more time attacking the policies of their Democratic opponents than
those of President Donald Trump and his fellow Republicans.
The ensuing intra-party fight muddled the moderates' argument that a
candidate in their mold is best-suited to take on Trump in November 2020
and left some Democrats wondering whether the tactic would come at a
cost to the party.
"Presidential campaigns aren't about the individual notes on the page,
they're about the music, and I thought it was really hard to hear any of
the music last night," said Tim Miller, a Democratic strategist who has
worked to elect senators.
The simmering rift over what type of nominee can win back voters who
deserted the Democratic Party to support Trump in 2016 after casting
ballots for former President Barack Obama was revealed at the outset of
the nearly three-hour debate in Detroit.
The first question of the night was directed at U.S. Senator Bernie
Sanders, who was asked to respond to former congressman and rival John
Delaney's claim that Sanders' Medicare for All healthcare proposal is a
form of "political suicide that will just get President Trump
re-elected."
"You're wrong," Sanders shot back to laughter and applause.
The blunt exchange kicked off a clash over healthcare that dominated the
first 45 minutes of the debate, as Sanders and fellow progressive U.S.
Senator Elizabeth Warren squared off against lesser-known and more
middle-of-the-road rivals who made the case for a healthcare "evolution,
not a revolution."
Trump's failure to keep his promise to repeal and replace the Affordable
Care Act, Obama's signature healthcare law, and replace it with a better
healthcare plan was a unifying talking point for Democrats in the 2018
midterm elections, helping the party take back control of the U.S. House
of Representatives.
But some Democrats worry the party is losing its advantage on the issue
going into 2020 as it airs its division on the best path forward.
Moderates on Tuesday accused progressives of wanting to take away the
hard-won health insurance of union workers and make private insurance
illegal.
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U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren, former U.S. Rep. Beto O'Rourke,
former Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper, former U.S. Rep. John
Delaney and Montana Governor Steve Bullock (L-R) debate on the first
night of the second 2020 Democratic U.S. presidential debate in
Detroit, Michigan, U.S., July 30, 2019. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson/File
Photo
"At the end of the day, I'm not going to support any plan that rips
away quality healthcare from individuals. This is an example of
wish-list economics," said Montana Governor Steve Bullock, who
touted his ability to win office in a Trump-supporting state as he
made his first appearance on the debate stage.
"It used to be just Republicans who wanted to repeal and replace,"
he added. "Now many Democrats do, as well."
PRACTICAL SOLUTION VS IMPOSSIBLE PROMISES
Bullock and his fellow moderates on the stage, all struggling to
stay viable in the race, argued for more incremental approaches to
achieving universal healthcare coverage. They emphasized practical
solutions over what they framed as their liberal rivals' impossible
promises.
In doing so, the centrists found a voice that has often been drowned
out during the first six months of the nominating contest.
In the first debate last month in Miami, former Vice President Joe
Biden, the front-runner in opinion polls, was sidetracked from
forcefully presenting and promoting the policy ideals of the more
moderate wing of the party when U.S. Senator Kamala Harris
challenged his record on racial justice in an exchange that
dominated the night.
Biden will have another chance to make that case in Wednesday
night's debate, which will spotlight 10 more Democrats vying for the
White House.
Some Democratic strategists said they hoped the party's candidates
would spend more of the second night of debate focusing on what they
see as the country's biggest threat: the possibility of Trump
getting re-elected.
"It seems beneath the moment to spend so much time debating the
finer points of healthcare plans that will be revised a hundred
times before they are ever even proposed to Congress, let alone
passed into law, while Rome is burning all around us," said Miller,
the Democratic strategist.
"I would rather see more of a conversation about the forest, and
less about the trees."
(Reporting by Amanda Becker in Detroit; Editing by Colleen Jenkins
and Matthew Lewis)
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