Omitted from debate stage, 2020 Democratic hopefuls seek limelight
elsewhere
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[December 19, 2019]
By Ginger Gibson
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Miles from where
seven Democratic presidential hopefuls will take the debate stage on
Thursday night in Los Angeles, Julian Castro on Wednesday walked the
city's Skid Row, the largest encampment of homeless people in the United
States
Castro, a former U.S. housing secretary, is among a handful of
presidential candidates trying to find ways to stay in the conversation,
after failing to meet the polling and donor requirements needed to
qualify for Thursday night's televised event.
U.S. Senator Cory Booker, among the 15 Democrats vying to win the right
to take on Republican President Donald Trump in November 2020, is
launching a new television ad on Thursday that references his omission.
"I won't be on tonight's debate stage, but that's okay because I'm going
to win this election anyway," Booker says in the advertisement, which
will air in several states including those holding the first four
nominating contests - Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada and South Carolina.
"This election isn't about who can spend the most, or who slings the
most mud. It's about the people," Booker says in the ad.
The Democratic Party has struggled with how to handle a historically
large field of candidates. In total, more than 25 people have mounted
campaigns, though the field has dwindled as some have bowed out.
The party has ratcheted up the requirements to participate in the
debates, which mandate that they demonstrate mettle in fundraising and
polling. For Thursday's debate, candidates must show that they have
received donations from at least 200,000 unique donors, as well as
meeting polling benchmarks.
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Democratic presidential candidate Julian Castro speaks with Chris
Smith, a homeless man who lives in the nation's largest encampment
of homeless people on Skid Row in Los Angeles, California, U.S.
December 18, 2019. REUTERS/Ginger Gibson
Twenty candidates qualified for the first debate back in June. By
November that was down to 10. On Thursday, it will be down to seven.
The left-out Democrats have largely focused their ire on the rivals
with the most personal wealth - specifically billionaires Tom Steyer,
who will be participating in the debate, and Michael Bloomberg, a
latecomer to the field who could not qualify for the televised
debate because he is not taking any donations.
Bloomberg will campaign in Tennessee on Thursday, where he will
unveil his policy proposal on health care.
Castro bemoaned the ability of billionaires who are self-funding
their campaign to make the debate stage.
"Our campaign has been speaking up for people who are often left
behind," Castro said after his walk down some of the roughest blocks
in Los Angeles. "What we are seeing in this election cycle is that,
too often in politics, money still talks, that people can basically
buy their way on to the debate stage."
(Reporting by Ginger Gibson, Editing by Soyoung Kim and Leslie
Adler)
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