As 2020 race heats up, growing worries Warren and Sanders will split
leftist vote
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[August 13, 2019]
By James Oliphant
DES MOINES, Iowa (Reuters) - At rallies at
the Iowa State Fair last week, 2020 White House contenders Elizabeth
Warren and Bernie Sanders drew raucous crowds who chanted their names,
waved signs and cheered at their every pledge.
Friends and liberal standard bearers of the Democratic Party, the two
U.S. senators espouse many of the same causes: universal healthcare,
taking on Wall Street, and raising the minimum wage.
Both candidates also have robust, well-funded campaigns and strong
claims on this state, which holds the first Democratic presidential
nominating contest in February.
That has some voters preoccupied with a question: is Iowa, or the
presidential field in general, big enough for two popular progressives
running head-to-head, or is there a risk that they could split the vote
on the left, to the benefit of a centrist such as former vice president
Joe Biden?
“Of course it concerns me,” said Sherma Mather, 50, who was visiting the
fair from Richmond, Virginia, to support Warren.
Although the field is unsettled with the Iowa caucuses still nearly six
months away, early opinion polls have consistently shown Biden in the
lead with either Sanders, of Vermont, or Warren, of Massachusetts, in
second place.
The fact that combining support for Sanders and Warren would eclipse
Biden's buttresses progressives’ arguments that the party is lurching
leftward.
"They are a 1-2 punch and they are having a gravitational pull on the
rest of the field," said Adam Green, co-founder of the Progressive
Change Campaign Committee (PCCC), an advocacy group that supports
Warren.
Two dozen Democrats are competing to secure their party’s nomination and
battle Republican President Donald Trump in the November 2020 general
election.
Sanders and Warren insist they are friends, not rivals. And they have so
far stayed true to their pledge not to turn on each other for political
gain, as moderate candidates warn that their reformist agenda will only
ensure Trump's re-election.
In Iowa, which has an outsized role in picking presidential nominees,
there are signs that Warren could be chipping away at some of Sanders'
long-held support on the left.
A recent poll by Monmouth University of Iowa Democrats showed Warren in
second place with 21% of the vote, trailing Biden by just seven
percentage points. Sanders had dropped to 9% in the state, according to
the poll.
Advisers to Sanders on Monday said the survey was flawed on the grounds
his supporters were undersampled.
Nationally, the news is better for him, with Sanders and Warren
basically neck-and-neck behind Biden. The most recent Reuters/Ipsos poll
had Sanders in second place by a wide margin over Warren.
Sanders “can make a case for himself at this juncture how he is a unique
candidate without denigrating others," said his campaign manager Faiz
Shakir.
Warren's campaign declined to comment for this story.
Watching Sanders at the state fair on Sunday, Alexis Johnson, 33, of Des
Moines, said beating Trump was her top priority as a voter and expressed
little enthusiasm for Warren.
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Democratic 2020 U.S. presidential candidate and U.S. Senator
Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) speaks at the Iowa State Fair in Des Moines,
Iowa, U.S., August 10, 2019. REUTERS/Brian Snyder
“It’s going to Bernie or Biden, I feel like,” she said. “And
Bernie’s my man.”
Misty Cornelius, 38, of Des Moines, was sporting a Sanders tattoo on
her chest at the fair, but she said Warren might be a better choice
against Trump.
“Bernie has been stigmatized,” she said. “Warren is a fresh face.”
DIFFERENT APPEAL
Despite sharing many of the same talking points, the two are
noticeably different on the stump.
Drawing upon her working-class Oklahoma roots, Warren casts herself
as a sort of prairie populist, while Sanders talks more in terms of
leading a “movement.”
There is evidence too that the two do not chase the same kind of
voters.
Patrick Murray, the polling director at Monmouth, said while “there
is ideological overlap,” Warren’s recent surge has her pulling
support away from virtually every other candidate, not just Sanders.
“Sanders has core support that will not desert him,” Murray said.
That grassroots support led Sanders in 2016 to battle the eventual
nominee Hillary Clinton to the very end of the primaries.
But Warren may have appeal to women, particularly college-educated
women, that Sanders cannot match. “I am sick and tired of men
running the world,” said Janet Caldwell, 66, of Washington, Iowa.
Sanders’ campaign in fact views Biden as their primary challenge,
because both are courting the kind of working-class voters and union
voters who gravitated to Trump in 2016.
Biden did little in Iowa to boost his status as a front-runner. He
made several gaffes, including when he said in a speech that "poor
kids are just as bright and just as talented as white kids" - a
sensitive slip-up in an election where race is in the spotlight.
Also waiting in the wings in Iowa is U.S. Senator Kamala Harris of
California, who ranked third in the state in the Monmouth poll with
11% support.
After Iowa, Sanders and Warren will clash in New Hampshire, which
holds the first Democratic primary later in February.
Many Warren voters, like Mather of Richmond, fear Sanders will not
yield if his fellow senator continues to gain momentum.
Right now, the foremost concern of the two campaigns is not to
siphon support off the other. Instead, they both want to convince
large swaths of voters that a progressive Democrat can win the
election against Trump, the PCCC’s Green said.
“Many ‘electability voters’ are parked in Joe Biden’s column,” Green
said, “but that perception is changing.”
(Editing by Soyoung Kim and Sonya Hepinstall)
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