Clinton and Sanders tussle over ISIS, Wall Street ties
There were plenty of heated exchanges at Saturday night’s Democratic presidential debate as Bernie Sanders sought to cut into front-runner Hillary Clinton’s lead, but there was no game-changing moment less than six weeks before the Iowa caucuses.
The two leading Democratic candidates looked to differentiate themselves on issues including foreign policy and economics during the contest at St. Anselm University in Manchester, N.H. Sanders, a senator from Vermont, tried to outflank Clinton on the left while Clinton sought to assert her experience.
The biggest source of disagreement onstage was over Clinton’s role as secretary of State in the ouster of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi in 2011.
{mosads}”I worry too much that Secretary Clinton is too much into regime change and a little bit too aggressive without knowing what the intended consequences might be,” he said.
“Yes, we could get rid of Saddam Hussein, but that destabilized the entire region. Yes, we could get rid of Gaddafi, a terrible dictator, but that created a vacuum for ISIS.”
But Clinton hit back, noting that Sanders voted for a measure in the Senate that called for regime change in Libya.
“All of these are very difficult issues, I know that, I’ve been dealing with them for a long time,” she said.
“If we had not joined with our European partners and our Arab partners to assist the people in Libya, you would be looking at Syria.”
Former Maryland Gov. O’Malley, fighting for attention on the stage and traction in the race, used the opportunity to launch a jab at his rivals’ age as well pan what he portrayed as old-school ways of thinking.
“May I offer a different generation’s perspective on this?” the 52-year-old said to a mix of jeers and some boos from the audience after Sanders, 74, and Clinton, 68, sparred over the merits of regime change.
“During the Cold War, we got into a bad habit of always looking to see who was wearing the jersey of the communists and who was wearing the U.S. jersey,” he said.
“We need to leave the Cold War behind us and we need to put together new alliances.”
But while it went over during the debate without much pushback, Clinton may have set up a future attack from GOP rivals when she lauded the president’s plan to combat terrorists from the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS).
“We now finally are where we need to be. We have a strategy and a commitment to go after ISIS, which is a danger to us as well as the region and we finally have a U.N. Security Council resolution bringing the world together to go after a political transition in Syria,” she said.
“If the United States does not lead, there is not another leader, there is a vacuum, and we have to lead if we’re going to be successful.”
Both the Republican National Committee and the Republican super-PAC America Rising emailed the comment to reporters criticizing the idea that America is “where we need to be” in the fight against ISIS and previewing a likely general election attack.
The candidates also tried to show their differences on economics, with Sanders using a Clinton joke to hit back at her for what he sees as ties to Wall Street.
When asked whether corporate America would love her, Clinton remarked with a smile, “Everyone should.”
But Sanders immediately hit back when asked the same question about himself.
“No I think they won’t,” he said.
“Hillary and I have a difference. CEOs of large multinationals may like Hillary, they ain’t gonna like me, and Wall Street is going to like me even less.”
The Sanders campaign sent out a fundraising email highlighting this exchange almost as soon as the debate was over.
But Clinton took Sanders to task on his expansions of social programs, which she framed as ballooning the size of government with no regard for costs and tax increases.
“It’s been estimated that we are looking at 18 to $20 million, about a 40 percent increase of the federal budget,” she said.
“I think we’ve got to be really thoughtful about how we are going to afford what we propose which is why everything that I have proposed I will tell you exactly how I will pay for it.”
Clinton promised not to raise taxes on families making less than $250,000, a promise aimed at a general election audience and the swing voters who could might be convinced to vote for a Democrat.
Sanders chose not to make that call, noting that many of country’s most important social programs including social security have been paid for by tax increases.
The biggest story of the past 24 hours, the heated standoff between the Democratic National Committee and the Sanders campaign over revelations that Sanders campaign staff improperly obtained proprietary data from the Clinton campaign, was the big news at the opening of the debate but was not revisited by either the moderators or the candidates.
Sanders apologized and Clinton accepted, noting that the race should move on.
“I want to apologize to my supporters,” he said. “This is not the type of campaign that I run.”
On Friday, Sanders’s campaign director directly accused the party of being in the tank for Clinton and filed a federal lawsuit late Friday afternoon, after the party briefly pulled his access to shared party voting data. Just after midnight, the DNC announced that it restored his campaign’s access. During the debate, the Vermont senator referred to the brief restriction by the DNC as an “egregious act.”
While Clinton at times mixed it up with her Democratic rivals, she kept her potential challengers on the other side of the aisle within her sights.
“I think it’s great standing up here with the senator and the governor talking about these issues because you are not going to hear anything like this from any of the Republicans who are running for president,” she said.
“They don’t want to raise the minimum wage, they don’t want to do anything to raise incomes.”
Her main target was GOP presidential front-runner Donald Trump, whom she called “ISIS’s best recruiter” in light of his call to halt Muslim immigration.
Sanders and O’Malley agreed with the criticism of the GOP at large, noting that the Democrats have more to offer the country than the “right-wing extremists” on the other side while O’Malley panned the “anger and fear” from the right.
With Republicans, the sentiment from Clinton was mutual. Jeb Bush’s campaign sent out an email to reporters criticizing Clinton’s claim that “we’re finally where we need to be” in fighting ISIS, and the Republican National Committee sent out almost a dozen emails panning Clinton on various points.
Republicans had also needled the Democrats on the timing of the debate, criticism echoed by both Sanders and O’Malley ahead of the event. Saturday night’s debate is competing with the opening weekend of the new Star Wars movie as well as a Saturday night NFL game.
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