Biden and Sanders confront coronavirus crisis in first one-on-one debate
Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders auditioned in real time
for the job of president on Sunday night during the first one-on-one debate of
the Democratic primary, as the world confronts the growing threat of the
coronavirus pandemic and American public health officials warned the worst is
yet to come.
The fast-escalating national emergency dominated the
prime-time encounter between two candidates with starkly different visions for
the country. Yet Biden and Sanders vigorously agreed on the need for a much
more aggressive government response to the virus, which had already resulted in
3,244 confirmed cases in the US, with 62 reported deaths, as of Sunday night.
Biden, who has presented himself as a pragmatic
standard-bearer, compared the battle against the disease to a war, calling for
a whole-of-government strategy that includes deploying the the military and
enacting a “multi-multi-billion-dollar program” to address the public health
and economic crises.
Sanders, a democratic socialist, urged sweeping
economic reforms and the creation of a single-payer healthcare system. He said
the pandemic had revealed “the dysfunctionality” of the country’s patchwork
healthcare system, arguing that the adoption of a Medicare for All-style system
like the one he has championed would help mitigate the toll of future
pandemics.
“One of the reasons that we are unprepared, and have
been unprepared, is we don’t have a system,” Sanders said. “We’ve got thousands
of private insurance plans. That is not a system that is prepared to provide
healthcare to all people in a good year, without the epidemic.”
But Biden said a single-payer healthcare system was
not the solution, pointing to Italy, where the outbreak has overwhelmed the
country’s national health services.
“Well, the
first thing we have got to do, whether or not I’m president, is to shut this
president up right now,” Sanders said. “He’s undermining the doctors and the
scientists who are trying to help the American people.”
After the debate, which Trump deemed “VERY boring”,
his campaign operation accused the candidates of “plagiarizing” the president’s
response to coronavirus, which it described as “a model for all future
pandemics”.
At a press conference from the White House on Sunday
afternoon, Trump urged Americans to “relax” and refrain from hoarding food. But
moments later, Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and
Infectious Diseases, warned: “The worst is, yes, ahead for us.”
The two-hour debate, hosted by CNN and Univision,
took place as viewers across the nation retreated into their homes amid
disruptive, even draconian, efforts to slow the spread of coronavirus. Hours
earlier, New York City had ordered public schools closed; California had asked
bars to shutter, and the Federal Reserve announced it was slashing interest
rates to near zero.
As the debate opened, the US Centers for Disease
Control published an advisory on its website recommending that events of 50
people or more be cancelled or postponed for the next eight weeks throughout
the United States.
In a sign of the times, the candidates, both
septuagenarians at greater risk, bumped elbows instead of shaking hands when
they stepped on stage, where their podiums were arranged noticeably far apart
in accordance with guidelines for social distancing.
The debate itself was relocated from a convention
center in Phoenix to a television studio in Washington to limit unnecessary
travel and exposure. There was no live audience, press filing center or spin
room. And ahead of the event, the Univision anchor Jorge Ramos, a moderator who
may have been exposed to the virus, bowed out as a precautionary measure.
The race has changed dramatically since the
Democrats’ last debate, before the South Carolina primary three weeks ago, when
Sanders was winning early contests as Biden’s campaign verged on collapse. In a
sharp reversal of fortunes, Biden stepped on to the debate stage on Sunday
night as the frontrunner while Sanders fought for the future of his candidacy,
just days ahead of four more primary votes.
After rebounding in remarkable fashion, Biden now
leads Sanders by roughly 150 delegates following a second consecutive week of
commanding primary victories. A strong showing on Tuesday – when Illinois,
Ohio, Arizona and Florida will go to the polls to vote for their preferred
candidates – could all but guarantee Biden’s ascent to the nomination to face
Trump in the November election.
Throughout the evening, Biden kept his sights set on
the general election, even as he clashed with Sanders on a number of policy
issues, including social security, gun control, climate change, abortion rights
and immigration.
At one point, Biden committed to selecting a woman
to be his running mate if he becomes the Democratic nominee and re-committed to
nominating a black woman to the supreme court if elected president. Sanders
said he would also choose a woman “in all likelihood” as his pick for
vice-president, but said his priority is finding a lieutenant who supports his
progressive values.
“For me it’s not just about nominating a woman. It’s
about making sure that we have a progressive woman,” Sanders said, adding
wryly: “There are progressive women out there.”
Ahead of the debate, Biden extended an olive branch
to the party’s left wing, adopting a bankruptcy reform plan introduced by his
former rival Elizabeth Warren and expanding his higher education platform to
move closer to Sanders’ proposal to eliminate college tuition at all two- and
four-year public colleges for students regardless of income. In a statement,
Sanders said the plan did not go far enough.
The candidates sought to strike a delicate balance
between debating the issues and addressing the urgent health crisis. Sanders
confronted Biden over his positions on healthcare and climate change, among
other issues. In one tense exchange, Sanders said Biden’s climate plan fell
short.
“All well and good, but not nearly enough,” the
Vermont senator said, later accusing Biden of “missing the point”. Sanders is a
proponent of the Green New Deal, a sweeping proposal that calls for aggressive
action to combat climate change.
The pandemic has reshaped the way the candidates
campaign for the nomination, forcing Biden and Sanders to cancel rallies,
suspend field operations and hold virtual campaign events. The candidates said
they were taking extra precautions to protect themselves from becoming
infected, emphasizing that they were in good health and had not displayed any
of the underlying symptoms.
“I’m not shaking hands,” Sanders said, noting that
he held a “fireside chat” from his home in Burlington on Sunday instead of a
rally.
Biden added: “I wash my hands God knows how many
times a day.”