After fiery debate attacks on Bloomberg, Democrats scatter on campaign
trail
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[February 20, 2020]
By Tim Reid and Simon Lewis
LAS VEGAS (Reuters) - The Democratic
presidential contenders begin a frantic dash for votes on Thursday after
a fiery debate featuring a volley of attacks on big-spending billionaire
Michael Bloomberg, who was making his debut on the national debate
stage.
With two days to go before the presidential caucuses in Nevada and
contests looming in 14 states on Super Tuesday on March 3, including
California, Utah and Colorado, the candidates will scatter across those
four states for rallies and get-out-the vote events.
The intensity of the unsettled Democratic race was evident in
Wednesday's debate, which featured repeated attacks on Bloomberg for his
record on race, history of sexist comments and use of his fortune to
push his way up the polls.
The former New York City mayor, who has been rising fast in polls since
he joined the race in November, seemed uncomfortable and hesitant at
times in his first debate. He defended his record and argued he had the
best chance of beating Republican President Donald Trump in the Nov. 3
election.
Rivals Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Amy Klobuchar, Joe Biden and
Pete Buttigieg all leaped at the chance to go after the media mogul, who
has surged in polls by spending hundreds of millions of dollars out of
his own pocket on an advertising blitz.
They criticized Bloomberg, who has been accused over the years of sexist
comments, for his treatment of women as well as his support while mayor
of "stop-and-frisk" police policies that ensnared disproportionate
numbers of blacks and Latinos.
The candidates also accused Bloomberg of trying to buy his way into the
White House and said his record as mayor and businessman was not good
enough to beat Trump.
"Democrats take a huge risk if we just substitute one arrogant
billionaire for another," said Warren, a senator from Massachusetts who
had her most aggressive debate.
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Senator Bernie Sanders speaks as his rivals for the 2020 Democratic
presidential nomination listen at the ninth Democratic 2020 U.S.
Presidential candidates debate at the Paris Theater in Las Vegas
Nevada, U.S., February 19, 2020. REUTERS/Mike Blake
Nevada's caucuses are the third contest in the state-by-state race
to find a challenger to Trump. South Carolina holds its primary on
Feb. 29.
Buttigieg, the former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, has a town hall
meeting and a fundraiser scheduled in Los Angeles, and Bloomberg has
a morning event in Utah.
Warren and Biden will have a town hall that airs on CNN on Thursday
night from Las Vegas. Klobuchar, a senator from Minnesota, has a
campaign event in Colorado.
Bloomberg entered the race in November and is skipping the early
voting states in February.
Trump delivered his judgment on Bloomberg's performance with a tweet
late on Wednesday: "He was stumbling, bumbling and grossly
incompetent. If this doesn’t knock him out of the race, nothing
will."
(Reporting by Tim Reid and Simon Lewis in Nevada, Ginger Gibson and
John Whitesides in Washington; Writing by John Whitesides; Editing
by Sonya Hepinstall)
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