U.S. Democrats back on 2020 campaign trail after debate attacks on
Warren
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[October 16, 2019]
By Trevor Hunnicutt and Jarrett Renshaw
WESTERVILLE, Ohio (Reuters) - The
Democratic presidential contenders head back to the campaign trail on
Wednesday after a debate that featured repeated attacks on surging
progressive U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren and exposed the party's
divisions on issues like healthcare and taxes.
While Warren has risen in the past month into a virtual tie with former
Vice President Joe Biden in opinion polls atop the Democratic race, most
other contenders face an urgent challenge in breaking out of the pack
while the political world is riveted by the Democratic-led impeachment
inquiry of Republican President Donald Trump.
The first nominating contest in the Democratic race to pick a challenger
to Trump in the November 2020 election is Feb. 3 in Iowa, giving
candidates less than four months to make their case to voters on why
they are best suited for the job.
Many of the contenders also face a scramble to qualify for the next
Democratic debate in Georgia in November, when the polling and
fundraising qualifying criteria will be even tougher. So far, just eight
candidates have qualified.
In Tuesday's debate, moderates Pete Buttigieg, the mayor of South Bend,
Indiana, and U.S. Senator Amy Klobuchar aggressively went after Warren
to explain how she would pay for ambitious proposals including her
Medicare for All plan and how much they would cost.
Both candidates are trying to break out of the middle of the crowded
Democratic pack. Buttigieg has qualified for the November debate, while
Klobuchar has not.
"I think we owe it to the American people to tell them where to send the
invoice," Klobuchar told Warren. "The difference between a plan and a
pipe dream is something you can actually get done."
Klobuchar pushed back when Warren said critics of her wealth tax were
trying to protect billionaires, saying: "No one on this stage wants to
protect billionaires," adding: "Your idea is not the only idea."
CRAMMED DEBATE STAGE
The sharp exchanges were a sign of the heightened stakes as a dozen
candidates crammed the debate stage in the electoral battleground state
of Ohio. It was the most crowded debate so far in the Democratic
presidential race.
The debate comes at a critical time, as Biden has seen his once solid
lead in opinion polls among Democrats diminished by Warren, a leader of
the party's progressive movement, who has steadily risen over the past
two months.
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Senator Kamala Harris, Senator Bernie Sanders, former Vice President
Joe Biden, Senator Elizabeth Warren and South Bend Mayor Pete
Buttigieg wait onstage before the fourth Democratic U.S. 2020
presidential election debate at Otterbein University in Westerville,
Ohio October 15, 2019. REUTERS/Aaron Josefcz/File Photo
Warren stayed calm under the attacks, offering her proposals to end
income inequality and level the economic playing field for workers.
She did not directly respond to questions about whether she would
raise taxes for the healthcare plan, but she said she would not sign
any bill that does not lower healthcare costs for middle-class
families.
"I have made clear what my principles are here, and that is that
costs will go up for the wealthy and for big corporations and, for
hard-working middle-class families, costs will go down," she said.
The expansive Medicare for All proposal, based on the government-run
healthcare plan for Americans over age 65, has sharply divided
Democratic presidential contenders. Some analysts have said it would
cost $32 trillion over a decade.
Many other Democratic candidates back a Medicare-based plan as just
one option for Americans seeking healthcare coverage.
U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders, who sponsored a bill in the Senate to
create a Medicare for All plan, said he thought it was "appropriate
to acknowledge that taxes would go up" under the proposal.
The debate marked the return of Sanders, 78, the oldest candidate in
the field, who suffered a heart attack two weeks ago and has been
recuperating at home in Vermont since having stents inserted to open
a blocked artery.
Sanders will return to the campaign trail on Saturday with a rally
in New York, where a Sanders campaign source said he would be
endorsed by progressive U.S. Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
He also was endorsed on Tuesday by U.S. Representative Ilhan Omar,
an ally of Ocasio-Cortez.
The two congresswomen have been frequent targets of Trump for their
views.
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt and Jarrett Renshaw; Writing by John
Whitesides; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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