The Second Round of Democratic Debates
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The following is an opinion piece, not a summary, so it does not include comments on all debate participants.
Introduction
First, congratulations to any Eastern Shore resident — Democrat or Republican or Independent — who made it through the two-day, almost six-hour long slog.Even ardent Democrats confessed they fell asleep during the second night. Others said they watched over an hour on July 30, but decided to read about both later. The networks decided that more than two hours per debate is too long.
Gripping it wasn’t; there were winners and losers, but no obvious star emerged from this second round. Clarity also did not improve. It is difficult to distinguish among twenty candidates, unless you’re taking notes. However, it really is early days. Here are some general comments:
- There were no serious blunders or ambushes like the first set in June.
- There was too much arguing about whose health plan is best. Too weedy.
- POTUS’ record of actions to weaken ObamaCare was mentioned by too few candidates.
- The Democratic Party needs some coherent positions to counter Trump’s.
- Biden’s front runner status is fragile.
- Sanders vs. Warren confuses voters. What is a Socialist?
Night One, 7/30/19
The match Tuesday night was between the Democratic moderates (Gov. Steve Bullock, former Rep. John Delaney, former Gov. John Hickenlooper, Sen. Amy Klobuchar, and Rep. Tim Ryan) and the two Democrats with more strategic, but different visions (Sen. Elizabeth Warren and Sen. Bernie Sanders). Perhaps worth noting, the latter have two safe blue seats and the others don’t. Warren was most successful in explaining her advanced goals, Sanders was louder, while Bullock and Delaney countered with a dash of common sense and political reality. Hickenlooper seemed the weakest.
Substantively, both major elements of the Democratic Party — the further leftists and the further centrists — were well represented.
Night Two, 7/31/19
The second night featured former Vice President Joe Biden vs. Sen. Kamala Harris with Sen. Cory Booker, Gov. Jay Inslee, and Sen. Michael Bennet doing well. Booker, in particular, ably demonstrated his intelligence and more practical bent last Wednesday. Inslee and Bennet joined Booker in focusing on the President’s record on climate change, health care, and education in contrast with the Democrats’.
Biden improved his performance somewhat compared to June’s, but neither he nor Harris seemed particularly agile or coherent about their larger concept for the country. Both descended to weed level to challenge each other’s health care plan and generally looked to the past for inspiration. Biden’s clumsy use of President Obama’s achievements didn’t help.
Round Three will be in September, on the 12th and 13th, if two nights are needed again. The rumor is, though, that this next debate will involve only eight people, given the tougher qualifiers of fundraising and poll results. A lot can happen over the six weeks or so.
The following have qualified so far: Biden, Booker, Mayor Pete Buttigieg, Harris, Klobuchar, former Rep. Beto O’Rourke, Sanders, and Warren. Rep. Tulsi Gabbard has reached the donor threshold but not the polling threshold.
Common Sense for the Eastern Shore




