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		Biden mounts fierce defense of Obama legacy after debate attacks
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		 [August 05, 2019] 
		By Tim Reid 
 LAS VEGAS, Nevada (Reuters) - Democratic 
		presidential front-runner and former U.S. Vice President Joe Biden 
		mounted a fierce defense of Barack Obama's legacy on Saturday after 
		several of his White House rivals attacked that record in debates this 
		week.
 
 Biden, appearing at a union forum in Nevada with 18 Democratic rivals, 
		appeared fired up as he forcefully defended former U.S. Democratic 
		President Obama and his signature legislative achievement, the 
		Affordable Care Act, otherwise known as Obamacare.
 
 "I'm against any Democrat who wants to get rid of Obamacare," Biden, 76, 
		declared.
 
 Biden appeared at the forum shortly after U.S. Massachusetts Senator and 
		progressive candidate Elizabeth Warren had given her full-throated 
		backing to a "Medicare for All" healthcare plan, a government-run system 
		that would remove roughly 140 million Americans from their private or 
		employer-issued plans.
 
 
		
		 
		U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders from Vermont, another progressive 
		standard-bearer and White House candidate, also backs a Medicare for 
		All, government-run system and was due to speak at the forum.
 
 It was hosted by the American Federation of State, County and Municipal 
		Employees (AFSCME), the nation's largest public sector union with 1.4 
		million members and a sought-after endorsement by the Democratic 
		candidates.
 
 The dueling visions on health care, between Biden and other moderates, 
		and the progressives, is part of a broader fight over the future and 
		soul of the Democratic Party as 24 candidates vie to become the nominee 
		to take on U.S. Republican President Donald Trump in next November's 
		election.
 
		Part of that ideological fight among the large Democratic field has seen 
		some of Biden's rivals question Obama's legacy, as a means to criticize 
		Biden who served as his vice president for eight years and who has 
		embraced Obama's record. On the campaign trail, he frequently refers to 
		the "Obama-Biden" administration.
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			Candidate former Vice President Joe Biden walks on stage before the 
			start of the second night of the second 2020 Democratic U.S. 
			presidential debate in Detroit, Michigan, July 31, 2019. 
			REUTERS/Lucas Jackson/File Photo 
            
 
            In the debates this week, several of Biden's rivals delivered harsh 
			assessments of some Obama-era policies, particularly on immigration, 
			accusing Obama of deporting millions of undocumented immigrants and 
			Biden of doing nothing to halt that.
 One of the fiercest critics of Obama's immigration policy and of 
			Biden during the debates was Julian Castro, Obama's former housing 
			secretary. Some members of the Democratic establishment expressed 
			outrage that Democratic presidential candidates would criticize 
			Obama, who is still a revered figure among party rank-and-file, and 
			warned the tactic could backfire.
 
 At the union forum on Saturday, Castro sought to walk back those 
			attacks. He denied he was attacking Obama's record when he said 
			Democrats can learn from the past on immigration. He said he has 
			been "effusive" in his praise for Obama and that the Obama-era 
			immigration policy got better over time.
 
 Another 2020 candidate, Seth Moulton, a Massachusetts congressman 
			and moderate, said of the debates: "I saw a lot of candidates 
			tearing each other apart and tearing down President Obama's legacy."
 
 (Reporting by Tim Reid; Editing by Marguerita Choy)
 
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