Democratic Debate: Biden, Warren and Sanders Spar Over Healthcare
Three
frontrunners in the race to become Democratic Party candidate for US president
have clashed over healthcare at the party's third debate.
The debate
in Houston, Texas, was the first time Joe Biden, Elizabeth Warren and Bernie
Sanders faced off on stage.
Former Texas
lawmaker Beto O'Rourke drew some of the biggest applause with an impassioned
plea for gun control.
The winner
is likely to face President Donald Trump, a Republican, in the November 2020
poll.
Only the 10
highest-polling Democrats were eligible to take part in Thursday's debate.
Mr Biden,
who served as vice-president under Barack Obama, is leading current polls by a
considerable margin with Massachusetts Senator Ms Warren and Vermont Senator Mr
Sanders in second and third. The rest of the field are polling in single
figures.
As the
debate was under way, President Trump told a Republican gathering in Baltimore
that he now thought that Ms Warren had a chance of beating Joe Biden, referring
to both by derisive nicknames.
The legacy
of President Obama came up repeatedly, while there were also questions on
immigration, climate change and gun control. But it was healthcare that sparked
the fieriest clashes.
The issue of
how to reform the US healthcare system has divided moderate and more
progressive Democrats.
Mr Sanders
and Ms Warren both back Medicare for All, which would expand an existing
federal government programme for the elderly to cover all Americans.
This
government-run healthcare system would be financed by taxes and be similar to
what exists in Canada and many European countries, including the UK.
Mr Biden
criticised Mr Sanders' Medicare for All plan as being too expensive to work and
said the country should focus on improving Mr Obama's Affordable Care Act
instead.
"I know
the senator [Warren] says she's for Bernie. Well, I'm for Barack. I think
Obamacare worked," Mr Biden said. "My plan costs a lot of money...but
it doesn't cost $30tn (£24tn)."
Ms Warren
defended the policy, saying families have to deal with exorbitant healthcare
bills now, and only wealthier individuals and corporations would see increased
costs from the plan.
Some of the
lower polling candidates also attacked Mr Sanders and Ms Warren, with Minnesota
Senator Amy Klobuchar saying of Medicare for All: "I don't think that's a
bold idea. It's a bad idea."
Former Texas
congressman Beto O'Rourke, whose hometown El Paso was the site of a mass
shooting that left 22 dead, was asked whether he supports confiscating
assault-style rifles.
"Hell
yes we're going to take your AR-15, your AK-47," Mr O'Rourke said to
applause. "We're not going to allow it to be used against your fellow
Americans anymore."
California
Senator Kamala Harris drew President Trump into the debate, saying:
"Obviously he didn't pull the trigger, but he's certainly been tweeting
out the ammunition."
In their
opening remarks most of the candidates attacked President Trump, blasting him
for being a divisive leader and accusing him of racism.
Though some
sparks flew there was also a lot of common ground between the candidates.
Here are
some of the other memorable moments:
Businessman
Andrew Yang used his opening speech to announce he would be using donations to
his campaign to start a "freedom dividend", giving $1,000 (£810) a
month to 10 American families, prompting laughter from other candidates
New Jersey
Senator Cory Booker, who is a vegan, was asked by a Spanish-speaking moderator
whether he wanted Americans to stop eating meat to combat climate change. He
replied: "First of all, I want to say, no. Actually, I want to translate
that into Spanish: No."
Mr Biden
gave a rambling answer about combating the legacy of slavery by getting into
education, talking about keeping a "record player on at night [to] make
sure that kids hear words"
Housing
secretary under President Obama Julián Castro responded to South Bend, Indiana
Mayor Pete Buttigieg's criticism that debate fighting was
"unwatchable" by saying: "That's called an election"
Mr Castro
also took on Mr Biden, accusing him several times of "forgetting what you
said two minutes ago" in an exchange on healthcare.
He later defended the
remarks, telling the BBC it was not a personal attack on Mr Biden's memory but
rather reflected a disagreement over policy
Immigration
rights protesters entered the hall at one point, interrupting Mr Biden as he
responded to a question on resilience by talking about coping with the loss of
his first wife and children.
Mr
Buttigieg, the first openly gay presidential candidate, spoke about coming out
in his final remarks, saying: "I was not interested in not knowing what it
was like to be in love any longer."
Unlike the
two previous debates, Thursday's event took place over one night as only 10
candidates fulfilled the stricter polling and donor requirements. Ten others
remain in the race, and four have dropped out.
The
Democratic National Convention, at which the presidential nominee will be
formally chosen, will take place in July 2020 after a series of state primary
elections and party caucuses starting in February.
President Trump
was at an annual retreat for House Republicans in Baltimore as the debate took
place.
"I hit
Pocahontas way too early. I thought she was gone," he said, referring to
Elizabeth Warren, who has in the past made controversial claims about having
Native American ancestry.
"She's
emerged from the ashes and now it looks like she could beat Sleepy Joe, he's
fallen asleep. He has no idea what the hell he's doing or saying."
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-
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