With clock ticking, Democratic White House hopefuls sprint through Iowa
during impeachment break
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[January 27, 2020]
By Joseph Ax
AMES, Iowa (Reuters) - The leading three
Democratic U.S. senators running for president barnstormed across Iowa
this weekend, seeking to maximize a frenzied 36 hours before returning
to Washington to resume duties as jurors in President Donald Trump's
impeachment trial.
With barely a week to go before Iowans gather in caucuses to deliver the
first verdict of the Democratic presidential race, Bernie Sanders,
Elizabeth Warren and Amy Klobuchar flew to the state immediately after
Saturday's trial session ended early, hoping to gain ground in what has
been an unsettled contest.
The latest state polls have shown either Sanders or former Vice
President Joe Biden in the lead, with Warren and former South Bend,
Indiana, mayor Pete Buttigieg, close behind. Klobuchar is in fifth place
but has gained ground in recent weeks.
A significant number of voters have told pollsters they remain open to
more than one candidate, however.
The trial has wreaked havoc with the candidates' schedules, forcing
last-minute alternations, and left their staff unsure when they will be
able to return ahead of the Feb. 3 caucuses. Iowa kicks off a prolonged
state-by-state nominating process to select a challenger for Trump in
November.
"The schedule we had planned for Iowa is now in the garbage can,"
Sanders said at a campaign stop in Storm Lake on Sunday.
At a hastily organized event at a bar in Muscatine on Saturday,
Klobuchar thanked the crowd of about 100 for turning out on such short
notice.
"As you know, I would be here every day if I could, but I have a
constitutional obligation to fulfill my constitutional duty as a juror,"
Klobuchar said to applause.
A fourth U.S. senator, Michael Bennet, who is far behind in polls, spent
the weekend in New Hampshire, where he has staked his chances on the
nation's second nominating contest in two weeks.
The candidates will rely on broadcast appearances taped between trial
sessions, as well as surrogates who will travel to Iowa in their stead.
Warren, for instance, will dispatch former presidential candidate Julian
Castro to Iowa this week, while Sanders has employed U.S. Representative
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who enjoys a national following as a
progressive standard-bearer.
Meanwhile, Biden and Buttigieg will spend the week campaigning across
Iowa, making their final pitches to voters.
That could prove to be a powerful advantage in a state where residents
are accustomed to seeing their candidates up close and personal – and in
a race with no clear front-runner despite a year of intense campaigning.
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Democratic 2020 U.S. presidential candidate and U.S. Senator
Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) arrives in her campaign bus for a town hall
meeting in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, U.S., January 26, 2020. REUTERS/Brian
Snyder
"I think it's really important," said Ann La Pietra, 31, an
undecided voter and high school teacher who has attended multiple
candidate events, including Sanders' rally on Saturday. "When you
see them in person, it's a different experience."
MOTIVATING VOTERS
All three contenders spoke at length about the crucial but
hard-to-define quality of "electability," underscoring the urgency
of the moment.
"Can we just address it right here? Women win," Warren declared at a
town hall in Davenport on Sunday in a rare explicit appeal to
gender, after a voter asked her about the odds of beating Trump in
November's general election.
In Ames on Saturday, Sanders detailed why his campaign would be best
suited to take on the president, arguing that he would galvanize
young people and other infrequent voters with his message of
systemic change and economic populism.
In Waterloo on Sunday, Klobuchar said she would appeal to moderate
voters who sat out the 2016 election or switched from Democrat
Barack Obama to Trump, noting that she had carried heavily
Republican districts in all of her statewide races in Minnesota.
Several undecided voters said they were using the candidates' final
appearances to help make up their minds.
At a Sanders rally in Sioux City on Sunday evening, Craig Rude, 63,
said he was planning to see four more candidates before deciding. He
caucused for Sanders in 2016 after seeing him energize a rally the
day before, he said.
"I'm not influenced by the polls as much as who they are and how
they present themselves," he said. "It's how motivated they can get
people."
Even voters who played down the importance of seeing candidates in
person were swayed by what they heard.
Carol Einertson, 63, who has been supporting Buttigieg but has
lately begun considering Klobuchar, said she felt she knew enough
about the candidates from watching them on television.
An hour later, after listening to Klobuchar make her case in
Waterloo, Einertson admitted she was impressed.
"I'm much more convinced to vote for her," she said.
(Additional reporting by Tim Reid in Muscatine, Iowa, and Simon
Lewis in Storm Lake, Iowa; Editing by Robert Birsel)
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