Sledgehammer on Trump, scalpel on Sanders': Biden approaches key debate
Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders will square off in the
11th Democratic debate on Sunday night, in a contest moved from Arizona to
Washington DC and held without a live audience due to the coronavirus outbreak.
The escalating public health crisis has played havoc
with all areas of US life, but Arizona, Florida, Illinois and Ohio will still
go to the polls on Tuesday.
After his spectacular rebound on Super Tuesday and
strong performances this week, Biden is ahead in delegates earned, seemingly on
course for the nomination to face Donald Trump in November.
But Sanders has refused to throw in the towel,
saying this week that though he may be “losing the debate over electability”,
he is a champion for the views of most younger voters and wants to influence
the general election platform.
“On Sunday, I
very much look forward to the debate in Arizona with my friend Joe Biden,”
Sanders said, indicating he would challenge the former vice-president on
healthcare reform, the minimum wage and other progressive priorities.
Nick Carter, Sanders’ political outreach director in
2016, told the New York Times the Vermont senator was “pivoting to ensure that
the issues that he has built his political career around continue to be front
and center in the political dialogue.
“I also think he has [at the] top of [his] mind
ensuring his supporters and those unenthusiastic about a Biden candidacy don’t
call it a day.”
Many in the Democratic establishment would prefer
the independent from Vermont admit defeat and put his shoulder to the wheel for
Biden.
In emails to the Guardian, Martin O’Malley, a former
Baltimore mayor, Maryland governor and candidate for the presidential
nomination, said he was “guessing, most kindly, that Bernie is thinking as
quickly as Biden sprung back to political life, he could as easily stumble and
so he has an obligation to hang in there.
“What he risks is that more and more people [see]
his messiah veneer fall away and his hypocrisy on many issues – gun safety,
immigration reform, Russia interference – will strip away his lovable old uncle
persona.”
At the polls, Biden’s comeback from seemingly
inevitable defeat has been powered by older voters, moderates, voters in swing
counties and an overwhelming percentage of African Americans.
“I think Biden has been so battered and scarred
already,” O’Malley said, “[that] I’m not sure there is much more that Bernie
can do … in fact, Bernie could be a useful foil for Biden’s need to appeal to
and win more independents.”
Reed Galen, a former aide to George W Bush and John
McCain, left the Republican party in 2016 and is now part of the Lincoln
Project, a super Pac devoted to producing ads against Trump.
Sanders is “using the core of his support base to
not drop out gracefully”, Galen told the Guardian on Saturday, adding: “I don’t
think Bernie Sanders has grace about him. From my perspective I think he should
have [dropped out] and let the Biden campaign go and do the things it needs to
do vis-a-vis Trump.
“But Bernie doesn’t care because he’s not a Democrat
and never has been, so from his supporters’ perspective, if they wreck the
Democratic party it’s just another win for them.”
Galen and O’Malley both expected a fiery contest in
CNN’s Washington studio.
“Biden won’t stand there like a punching bag,” said
O’Malley, who experienced the highs and lows of the debate stage alongside
Sanders and Hillary Clinton. “He will hit back when pressed. And Bernie has no
choice but to press.”
Galen said he thought Biden had a good opportunity
to appeal again to moderates and independents, but added a warning about the
pitfalls of any such bare-knuckle political bout, into which Biden has fallen
in this and other elections.
“When you hit that debate stage it’s like a roller
coaster heading downhill,” he said. “You hope it’s going to stay on the tracks
but once in a while it goes flying off the edge.”
The coronavirus outbreak – which caused Univision
host Jorge Ramos to step aside as a debate host after contact with someone
exposed to Covid-19 – seems sure to dominate proceedings.
Both Biden and Sanders addressed the nation on the
subject this week, attempting to present a contrast with Trump’s wildly uneven
attempts to lead.
Galen said he thought Biden’s advisers would
therefore seek to “utilise what Biden has been best at, which is relying on
personal experience.
“We saw this week that he started talking about what
he’s done in government and what government can and can’t do. I think his team
will try to stay in that fairly narrow zone.
“But it wouldn’t surprise me if they also spend a
fair amount of time focused on Trump. Here’s a way that he can use a
sledgehammer on Trump but a scalpel on Sanders: by saying, ‘Here’s a guy we
elected that had no experience, no people willing to work for him, no people he
is willing to listen to. We can’t have that anymore.’”
Galen and O’Malley both deplored a tweet sent by
Trump’s campaign this week which called Biden a “rotting corpse of a
candidate”, and said it was a taste of the fierce and dirty fight to come.
“There is one question and only one question that
viewers will be asking themselves during Sunday’s debate,” O’Malley said, “and
it is this: which of these two candidates would do the best job of keeping me
and my family safe in a big emergency, like, a pandemic.
“What I do know is that of the three men left
[including Trump], more and more people are wishing Biden were already in
charge.”
In fact, the Hawaii congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard is
still campaigning. For the debate in Washington on Sunday, however, she did not
meet qualification criteria set by the Democratic National Committee.