The
Democratic National Committee, which sets the rules for how
candidates qualify for the debates, announced tougher
fundraising and polling thresholds for the sixth debate, which
will be held on December 19 in Los Angeles.
The criteria will likely mean several lower-tier candidates who
have made previous debates and are likely to make the cut for
next month’s fifth debate, could struggle to qualify for the
December event, which will mark the half-way stage of the
Democrats’ debate calendar.
The DNC has continually tightened the qualifying requirements
for debates as the year has progressed. The first debate in June
was spread over two nights with 20 candidates. The last debate
in Ohio earlier this month featured 12 candidates on one night.
So far nine candidates have qualified for November’s debate in
Georgia.
The stricter criteria will mean candidates trailing the top five
2020 hopefuls – former Vice President Joe Biden, U.S. Senators
Elizabeth Warren, Bernie Sanders and Kamala Harris and South
Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg - will be under increasing pressure to
make the cut for the December event.
To qualify for the Los Angeles debate, a candidate must hit 4
percent support in at least four DNC-approved polls, which may
be national surveys of primary voters or single-state polls in
the four early-voting states of Iowa, New Hampshire, South
Carolina or Nevada. Alternatively, they can hit 6 percent in two
early-state polls.
In addition, candidates must have received donations from at
least 200,000 unique donors, with a minimum of 800 unique donors
in 20 states, U.S. territories or the District of Columbia. The
deadline for qualifying polls and donation targets is December
12. The televised debate on December 19 will be hosted by PBS
NewsHour and Politico.
For next month’s fifth debate in Georgia, candidates need 3
percent support in four national or early-state polls and
165,000 unique donors, with at least 600 unique donors in 20
different states, territories or the District of Columbia.
(Reporting by Tim Reid; Editing by Dan Grebler)
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