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left-of-center2012

(34,195 posts)
Fri Jun 28, 2019, 11:49 AM Jun 2019

CNN: Winners and losers from night 2

“Winners and losers from night 2 of the 1st Democratic debate"
Analysis by Chris Cillizza, CNN Editor-at-large

WINNERS
Kamala Harris: The California Senator gave the strongest performance not just of Thursday night's debate but of either nights' debate. She was calm, poised, knowledgeable and, yes, presidential. She had the biggest moment of the night when she cut through a series of shouting voices to insist that the American public wanted to hear how the candidates were going to put food on their table, not witness a food fight. Her deeply personal recollection of her own experiences with race in California -- and her scolding of Joe Biden for his support of anti-busing legislation was hugely powerful.

Pete Buttigieg: If you knew nothing about Buttigieg going into Thursday night, you would have assumed from his performance that a) he was a senator or a governor who had been at this for a long time and b) a co-frontrunner with Harris in the race. That person would be stunned to learn that Buttigieg is currently the mayor of South Bend, Indiana, and running at the back of the lead pack. He was serious, smart, thoughtful and probing. His outspokenness on why Democrats need not cede religion to Republicans was powerful. His answer on the officer-involved shooting in his hometown was clearly well rehearsed, yes, but it was about as a good an answer as he could give on such a difficult issue. Buttigieg has lots and lots of natural political ability -- and it shone through on Thursday night.

Michael Bennet: Look, I don't think that the Colorado senator is somehow going to shoot from 1% to relevance in the polls based on his performance in this debate. He wasn't that good. But, for someone who a) no one knew going into this debate and b) had limited speaking opportunities to make his case, I thought Bennet performed well. Bennet's incredulity with Biden's belief that Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell would start working in a bipartisan way if the former vice president won the White House felt genuine -- and was powerful. In short: Bennet came out of this debate looking better than he went into it. Which is a win.

LOSERS
Joe Biden: Well, that went poorly. From the get-go, Biden seemed too rigidly attached to his stump speech and his talking points. He struggled to fit his points into the 60-second time limit. He got defensive -- as we predicted -- when Harris pushed him on his comments about segregationist Sen. James Eastland and his opposition to school busing and quite clearly lost the back and forth. Badly.When Biden was asked what his first act as president would be, he said it would be to defeat Donald Trump. Uh...The only extended applause lines Biden received were when he mentioned Barack Obama. But Obama isn't on the ballot and isn't endorsing Biden. It was a very shaky start for Biden. Very.

Bernie Sanders: The Vermont senator learned a tough lesson Thursday night: Debating nine people as one of the frontrunners for the nomination is a very different beast than debating a single, establishment frontrunner when you are the freewheeling insurgent. Rather than passionate, Sanders came off as just plain loud. Rather than committed, he came across as repetitive. And, even worse, there were large periods of the debate where Sanders seemed to just plain disappear. Sanders' worst -- and most damning -- moment? Moderator Rachel Maddow read him a quote of his about guns. Sanders responded: "That's a mischaracterization." Maddow retorted: "It's a quote of yours." The audience laughed -- at Sanders. Oomph.

Andrew Yang: Yang's online army insisted that this first debate would be his break-out moment -- a chance to push his message of the dangers of automation to the general public. The only thing that evoked automation was Yang; in the few moments when he spoke, he sounded like a robot.

Eric Swalwell: You know that guy in high school who has a catchphrase? And, the first time you hear it, you're like "That's not bad!" But by the time he says it for the 30th time before lunch, you have to fight down the urge to vomit in your mouth? That's Eric Swalwell and "pass the torch."

https://www.cnn.com/2019/06/27/politics/who-won-democratic-debate-night-2/index.html
If I were to vote in a presidential
primary today, I would vote for:
Joe Biden
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CNN: Winners and losers from night 2 (Original Post) left-of-center2012 Jun 2019 OP
Good to see some Bennett love BeyondGeography Jun 2019 #1
Let's see and hear more from him. blue neen Jun 2019 #2
The worst moment from last night: OilemFirchen Jun 2019 #3
 

BeyondGeography

(39,386 posts)
1. Good to see some Bennett love
Fri Jun 28, 2019, 11:54 AM
Jun 2019

I thought he was excellent on both style and substance.

If I were to vote in a presidential
primary today, I would vote for:
Undecided
 

blue neen

(12,332 posts)
2. Let's see and hear more from him.
Fri Jun 28, 2019, 12:00 PM
Jun 2019

Bennett was good last night.

If I were to vote in a presidential
primary today, I would vote for:
Joe Biden
 

OilemFirchen

(7,143 posts)
3. The worst moment from last night:
Fri Jun 28, 2019, 12:02 PM
Jun 2019

Turning to CNN to discover Chris Cuomo hosting a panel featuring Cenk Uygur and Chris Cillizza.

Utterly revolting.

If I were to vote in a presidential
primary today, I would vote for:
Joe Biden
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