Sanders to be in focus at South Carolina debate as rivals aim to slow 
		his surge
		
		 
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		 [February 25, 2020] 
		By Trevor Hunnicutt and John Whitesides 
		 
		CHARLESTON, S.C. (Reuters) - Surging 
		front-runner Bernie Sanders will be in the hot seat at the Democratic 
		debate in South Carolina on Tuesday, when his six presidential rivals 
		try to derail his growing momentum before the next big round of 
		nominating contests. 
		 
		Free-spending billionaire Michael Bloomberg, who had a rough debut on 
		the debate stage last week in Nevada, also will be back in the spotlight 
		at the candidates' final encounter before Saturday's South Carolina 
		primary and next week's 14 vital Super Tuesday contests. 
		 
		The pressure for a strong performance will be high for all of the 
		contenders. Joe Biden, the national front-runner not so long ago, needs 
		to win South Carolina to keep his campaign alive, while Pete Buttigieg, 
		Elizabeth Warren, Amy Klobuchar and Tom Steyer are desperately battling 
		for relevance. 
		 
		It will be the third debate this month, and the 10th overall, for the 
		Democrats vying for the right to challenge Republican President Donald 
		Trump in the Nov. 3 election. 
		 
		The encounters have grown more contentious as time runs out for the 
		candidates to make their case. 
		
		
		  
		
		 
		 
		"Sanders will probably be the focus of attacks this time, but I expect 
		there are going to be several people in the line of fire from all 
		directions," said Kelly Dietrich, a Democratic strategist who trains 
		candidates. 
		 
		Sanders, an independent senator from Vermont and a self-identified 
		democratic socialist, has taken command of the race after strong 
		showings in the first three nominating contests in Iowa, New Hampshire 
		and Nevada, alarming a Democratic establishment wary of his aggressive 
		economic equality and social justice agenda. 
		 
		But he stayed largely out of the spotlight at last week's debate as the 
		candidates turned a volley of scathing attacks on Bloomberg, the former 
		New York mayor who had been rising in polls after an unprecedented 
		spending spree on ads. 
		 
		Bloomberg will need to rebound at Tuesday's debate to keep his momentum 
		alive. He entered the race in November and is skipping the four early 
		voting states to focus on later contests starting with Super Tuesday, 
		when 14 states vote. 
		 
		Sanders will not be able to slide by as easily this time around, as 
		candidates are already turning up their attacks on him on the campaign 
		trail. 
		 
		CHALLENGE FOR BUTTIGIEG 
		 
		Buttigieg, the moderate former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, has led the 
		charge against Sanders, labeling him a polarizing candidate who would 
		repel new voters. 
		 
		Buttigieg could also face one of his most challenging debates. South 
		Carolina and its large bloc of black voters will be a test of whether he 
		can improve on what polls show is his lack of appeal to African 
		Americans. 
		 
		He joined a march of McDonald's workers in Charleston on Monday 
		demanding a $15-an-hour minimum wage, and was met by counter-protesters 
		wearing shirts that read: "Black Voters Matter" and chanting: "Pete 
		can’t be our president. Where was $15 in South Bend?" 
		 
		[to top of second column] 
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			Former New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg and Senator Bernie Sanders 
			are seen on video screens in the media filing center during the 
			ninth Democratic 2020 U.S. Presidential candidates debate at the 
			Paris Theater in Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S., February 19, 2020. 
			REUTERS/David Becker/File Photo 
            
  
            Sanders is likely to be questioned about his praise for Cuba's late 
			revolutionary leader Fidel Castro during an interview on the "60 
			Minutes" television program on Sunday. He said it was unfair to say 
			everything about Castro was bad. 
			 
			"When Fidel Castro came into office, you know what he did? He had a 
			massive literacy program. Is that a bad thing? Even though Fidel 
			Castro did it?" Sanders asked. 
			 
			That drew blowback from Democrats in Florida, a general election 
			battleground and home to a large number of people who fled Cuba 
			during Castro's rule and their descendants. 
			 
			The debate stakes will be high as well for Biden, the former vice 
			president. He is counting on a win in South Carolina, given his 
			popularity among black voters, who make up more than half of the 
			Democratic electorate in the Southern state. 
			 
			Biden has led opinion polls in the state, but Sanders has been 
			chipping away at his support and showed signs in Nevada he was 
			expanding his backing to a more diverse electorate. Sanders won most 
			of the state's sizable Latino voting bloc, entrance polls showed, 
			and finished second to Biden among black voters. 
			 
			Steyer, an activist billionaire who also has spent his own money 
			heavily on his campaign, will return to the debate stage after 
			failing to qualify in Nevada. 
			 
			He could make a difference in South Carolina, where polls show he 
			has his greatest strength. He registers third there in the Real 
			Clear Politics average of state polls. 
			 
			The debate might provide a make-or-break moment for Klobuchar and 
			Warren, senators from Minnesota and Massachusetts respectively, 
			whose lagging campaigns badly need a boost. In Nevada's caucuses, 
			Warren was a distant fourth behind Sanders, Biden and Buttigieg, 
			with Klobuchar sixth, behind Steyer. 
			 
			"Some of these candidates are likely to begin facing questions from 
			the moderators about why they are staying in the race," said 
			Mitchell McKinney, a political scientist and debate expert at the 
			University of Missouri. 
            
			  
			 
			(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt and John Whitesides; Additional 
			reporting by Jarrett Renshaw; Writing by John Whitesides; Editing by 
			Soyoung Kim and Peter Cooney) 
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