Democratic 2020 candidates pitch Iowa
party leaders on how to beat Trump
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[June 10, 2019]
By John Whitesides
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (Reuters) - Nineteen
Democratic presidential candidates delivered rapid-fire sales pitches to
Iowa party leaders on Sunday, touting their ability to energize voters,
win the White House and deliver on longtime party goals such as
universal healthcare.
At the biggest gathering so far of 2020 presidential candidates, the
Democrats had five minutes each to sum up their case for the presidency.
Most agreed on the problems, including finding a solution to climate
change, improving public education and easing pay and wealth inequality.
They all agreed on the solution: Defeating Republican President Donald
Trump.
"Now is not the time to be polite. Now is not the time for small steps.
Now it’s time to fight like hell," U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand told
the 1,400 Iowa state party leaders and activists who jammed a hotel
ballroom for the state party's Hall of Fame dinner.
The dinner in Iowa, the state that holds the first nominating contest in
the Democratic presidential race in February, came one day after the Des
Moines Register published a new Iowa opinion poll showing former U.S.
Vice President Joe Biden leading the pack in the state.
U.S Senators Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren, along with South Bend,
Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg, were bunched closely in a fight for
second place in the poll.
Sanders and Buttigieg took what seemed to be veiled swipes at Biden, the
Democratic front-runner who skipped the dinner because of a scheduling
conflict.
"I understand there are some well-intentioned Democrats and candidates
who believe the best way forward is a middle-ground strategy that
antagonizes no one, that stands up to nobody and that changes nothing,"
Sanders said. "In my view, that approach is not just bad public policy,
but it is a failed political strategy that I fear would end up with the
re-election of Donald Trump."
Buttigieg ridiculed the idea that Democrats could return to the 1990s.
"We're not going to win by playing it safe or promising a return to
normal. We are where we are because normal broke," he said.
WARNING ON 'SOCIALISM'
Iowa party leaders said the dinner would be an opportunity for
lesser-known candidates to make their case, and several of those
Democrats warned the party against leaning too far to the left,
reflecting the lingering tensions between the party's progressive and
more pragmatic, moderate wings.
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U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) talks to customers at the
Pierce Street Coffee Works while on a walking tour after announcing
that she is forming an exploratory committee to enter the 2020
presidential race, in Sioux City, Iowa, U.S., January 18, 2019.
REUTERS/Scott Morgan/File Photo
Former Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper took aim at Sanders'
democratic socialist agenda and said it was bad politics that could
be a stumbling block to defeating Trump in 2020.
"We must present a bold vision for the future, but we also must
acknowledge that the most effective charge Republicans can level
against us is 'socialism,'" he said.
Former U.S. Representative John Delaney said Democrats should be a
"big-tent" party that appealed to progressives, moderates,
independents and disaffected Republicans.
"If we become that party, we’re going to win every election. And
more importantly, we'll be able to govern," he said.
The dinner tested the organizational strength of campaigns that
purchased tickets for supporters and packed them into the hotel
ballroom. Supporters of most of the candidates lined the street
outside the dinner's main entrance starting early on Sunday.
Warren and fellow U.S. Senators Cory Booker, Kamala Harris and Amy
Klobuchar had big turnouts of chanting and cheering supporters in
red, blue, pink, green and yellow T-shirts outside the hall, and
then led them in raucous marches inside.
"It's time for a woman in the White House!" chanted Harris and
Klobuchar supporters.
Buttigieg held a picnic nearby with supporters who then marched to
the hall. Sanders led a march to the hall of McDonald's workers and
other union activists who support a $15-an-hour federal minimum
wage.
"No middle ground!" chanted the Sanders supporters.
(Reporting by John Whitesides;; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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