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10 votes
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‘A hot, flaming mess’: Georgia primary beset by chaos, long lines
9 votes -
Biden asks Amy Klobuchar to undergo vetting as possible running mate
9 votes -
Judge orders Bernie Sanders, Andrew Yang, others to be reinstated to New York primary ballot
21 votes -
New evidence supporting credibility of Tara Reade’s allegation against Joe Biden emerges
12 votes -
Could Donald Trump delay the US presidential election?
10 votes -
Bernie Sanders endorses Joe Biden
39 votes -
The most important states in the 2020 US election already have vote-by-mail
8 votes -
Bernie Sanders drops out of American presidential race
50 votes -
Wisconsin governor orders stop to in-person voting on eve of election
9 votes -
Bernie Sanders's campaign says he'll participate in an April debate if one is announced
4 votes -
Tulsi Gabbard suspends US election campaign, endorses Joe Biden
17 votes -
Fact check: Joe Biden has advocated cutting Social Security for forty years
5 votes -
Bernie Sanders says he's staying in race, looks forward to debating Joe Biden
14 votes -
"Can Biden beat Trump?"
What the polls say about a Biden v Trump matchup (The polls say yeah so... yeah. Admittedly this is a repeat of 2016 and Ukraine will basically be the same thing as Clinton's emails and nothing is...
What the polls say about a Biden v Trump matchup
(The polls say yeah so... yeah. Admittedly this is a repeat of 2016 and Ukraine will basically be the same thing as Clinton's emails and nothing is truly guaranteed.)Can Biden beat Trump? The truth is he's just as risky as Bernie
(Neither of them is a guaranteed win. If there was a safe choice, it wasn't one of these 2.)Stop saying Biden is the 'most electable'. Trump will run rings around him. (No. And not because of his record or gaffes, but because he is an establishment politician and Ukraine will leave the same impression on Biden as Clinton's emails. Are you people insane? Have you forgotten 2016?)
15 votes -
Democratic National Committee nixes audience for Phoenix debate over coronavirus concerns
9 votes -
Andrew Yang endorses Joe Biden
16 votes -
Elizabeth Warren is ending her US presidential campaign
47 votes -
Many young voters sat out Super Tuesday, contributing to Bernie Sanders' losses
29 votes -
Bloomberg drops out of presidential race, endorses Biden
30 votes -
Live election results: Super Tuesday 2020
26 votes -
Twenty-two studies, across ideological differences, agree: Medicare for All saves money
37 votes -
Sanders, Bloomberg trade insults as Democratic White House race heats up
6 votes -
How will the Nevada caucuses turn out?
Fears grow over Nevada caucus malfunction (Probably as bad as Iowa. Not paywalled) Another caucus is coming. But Nevada will look completely different (It will be far more representative than...
Fears grow over Nevada caucus malfunction (Probably as bad as Iowa. Not paywalled)
Another caucus is coming. But Nevada will look completely different (It will be far more representative than Iowa. Also they will use a Google Form so technical issues will be limited. Paywalled)
What we know (and don't) about the Nevada caucus 'tool' (Covers on the 'tool' that will be used to count the votes, potential backups in case of failure and a few other caucus related technicalities. Not paywalled)
8 votes -
Nevada culinary union lays into Sanders supporters after health care backlash
7 votes -
Elizabeth Warren before she was a politician
10 votes -
Iowa Democratic caucus results delayed until Tuesday due to reporting inconsistencies and technical issues with app
35 votes -
Biden says he will endorse any Democrat who wins nomination
14 votes -
Marianne Williamson asks Iowans to help keep Andrew Yang in the 2020 presidential race
8 votes -
Andrew Yang qualifies for New Hampshire primary debate
19 votes -
In a break with convention, the New York Times editorial board has chosen to endorse two separate Democratic candidates for president: Amy Klobuchar and Elizabeth Warren
19 votes -
Sanders climbs, now tied with Biden among registered voters: Reuters poll
23 votes -
A New Electorate: Can the Bernie Sanders Campaign Alter the Course of the Democratic Party?
7 votes -
Julián Castro endorses Elizabeth Warren for US President
11 votes -
Andrew Yang blocked from appearing on Ohio ballot due to incomplete paperwork
16 votes -
Mike Bloomberg exploited prison labor to make 2020 Presidential campaign phone calls
23 votes -
Sixth Democratic debate live stream (Dec 2019)
15 votes -
Why Biden has such a large lead in the polls
13 votes -
Yang qualifies for December Democratic debate
34 votes -
Kamala Harris drops out of 2020 presidential race
25 votes -
Michael Bloomberg joins 2020 Democratic field for US President
13 votes -
What Andrew Yang means
11 votes -
A new high-powered super PAC is going to spend millions to back Andrew Yang
17 votes -
Elizabeth Warren calls out Facebook for allowing lies in political ads by lying in a Facebook political ad
@juliacarriew: Elizabeth Warren is now running FB ads with a false statement about Mark Zuckerberg and FB endorsing Trump for president, to draw attention to FB's controversial policy allowing politicians to make false statements in ads. https://t.co/hulwrb3cc3
17 votes -
Democratic Debate #3 - Sept 12 2019
I don't have as much to put up here as @alyaza but I thought it'd kick off the discussion as the debate begins. Watch live on your local ABC station. Edit: or on YouTube (thanks @deimos)...
I don't have as much to put up here as @alyaza but I thought it'd kick off the discussion as the debate begins.
Watch live on your local ABC station.
Edit: or on YouTube (thanks @deimos) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2UWVO0Trd1cOnly 10 candidates and 1 night of debates this time.
15 votes -
Andrew Yang gets media cold shoulder
19 votes -
Elizabeth Warren’s Classroom Strategy: A lifelong teacher, she’s the most professorial presidential candidate ever. But does America want to be taught?
13 votes -
How San Francisco’s Wealthiest Families Launched Kamala Harris
8 votes -
Democratic Debate #2 Thread (Night 2)
welcome to debate #2, night 2. with night one out of the way, and the expectations set by our first night of candidates, we turn to a much more diverse, much more ideologically separated group of...
welcome to debate #2, night 2. with night one out of the way, and the expectations set by our first night of candidates, we turn to a much more diverse, much more ideologically separated group of candidates ranging from asian-american technocrat andrew yang to moderate-progressives african-americans in booker and harris, and from berniecrat-type tulsi gabbard to solidly moderate joe biden. it seems likely that we'll see more fireworks today than we did last night, especially given CNN's adversarial lines of questioning in the first night. as always, here are all the details you'd ever need, and probably then some:
i recommend you sort by newest first (or order posted) instead of the default since this thread will likely be semi-active and covering a live event.
How to Watch:
The debate each night will start at 8 p.m. ET and last two hours.
TV broadcast: CNN
Free online stream: CNN.com, CNN apps
Additional coverage: CBS News, NBC NewsThe Candidates:
The second Democratic presidential debate: July 30-31, 2019
~ Night 1 (Tuesday, July 30): Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg, former Texas Rep. Beto O’Rourke, Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar, author Marianne Williamson, former Maryland Rep. John Delaney, former Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper, Ohio Rep. Tim Ryan, and Montana Gov. Steve Bullock. ~
Night 2 (Wednesday, July 31): Former Vice President Joe Biden, California Sen. Kamala Harris, New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker, former HUD Secretary Julián Castro, business leader Andrew Yang, Washington Gov. Jay Inslee, Hawaii Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, and Colorado Sen. Michael Bennet.The Rules:
A candidate "who consistently interrupts" on Tuesday and Wednesday nights will be penalized by having his or her time reduced.
Campaign representatives have also been told there will be no "lightning round"-type questions requiring a show of hands or one word responses.
The debate will be moderated by Dana Bash, Don Lemon and Jake Tapper. Each of the 10 candidates each night will be allowed to make brief opening and closing statements, the network said.The Analysis:
NPR has 5 questions for this debate:
- Will there be any distinctions drawn between Sanders and Warren?
- Will some of the air be taken out of Sanders' sails because Biden isn't onstage?
- How is race raised?
- Who breaks out?
- Without hand-raising, will we get answers that are as clear?
other pre-debate analysis pieces that may be pertinent to you:
Aftermath of Night One:
- POLITICO: It’s a center-left party after all
- the Atlantic: Elizabeth Warren’s Big Night
- NPR: Sanders And Warren Stand Together: Takeaways From Tuesday's Democratic Debate
- NBC News: The Warren-Sanders wing comes up short
- NPR: 'Impossible Promises' Vs. 'Small Ideas.' Moderates And Progressives Clash At Debate
- the Atlantic: Democratic Moderates Fade Into the Background
- Buzzfeed: Mayor Pete Has A Plan To Address Systemic Inequality For Black Americans. He Was Barely Able To Talk About It In The Debate.
- Vox: Is it me or is Marianne Williamson making a lot of sense?
- Vox: 3 winners and 4 losers from the first night of the July Democratic debates
- the Guardian: Who won the Democrats' debate? Our panelists' verdict
Expectations for Night Two:
24 votes -
Democratic Debate #2 Thread (Night 1)
welcome to debate #2, night 1. after a margin-moving first set of debates, the bar has been set for candidates. some candidates tonight are probably in a fight for their campaign hopes, while...
welcome to debate #2, night 1. after a margin-moving first set of debates, the bar has been set for candidates. some candidates tonight are probably in a fight for their campaign hopes, while others are mostly looking to not get obliterated and stay the course. here are all the details you'd ever need, and probably then some:
i recommend you sort by newest first (or order posted) instead of the default since this thread will likely be semi-active and covering a live event.
How to Watch:
The debate each night will start at 8 p.m. ET and last two hours.
TV broadcast: CNN
Free online stream: CNN.com, CNN apps
Additional coverage: CBS News, NBC NewsCNN's stream is here, ABC stream which may or may not be meta commentary
The Candidates:
The second Democratic presidential debate: July 30-31, 2019
Night 1 (Tuesday, July 30): Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg, former Texas Rep. Beto O’Rourke, Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar, author Marianne Williamson, former Maryland Rep. John Delaney, former Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper, Ohio Rep. Tim Ryan, and Montana Gov. Steve Bullock.
Night 2 (Wednesday, July 31): Former Vice President Joe Biden, California Sen. Kamala Harris, New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker, former HUD Secretary Julián Castro, business leader Andrew Yang, Washington Gov. Jay Inslee, Hawaii Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, and Colorado Sen. Michael Bennet.The Rules:
A candidate "who consistently interrupts" on Tuesday and Wednesday nights will be penalized by having his or her time reduced.
Campaign representatives have also been told there will be no "lightning round"-type questions requiring a show of hands or one word responses.
The debate will be moderated by Dana Bash, Don Lemon and Jake Tapper. Each of the 10 candidates each night will be allowed to make brief opening and closing statements, the network said.The Analysis:
NPR has 5 questions for this debate:
- Will there be any distinctions drawn between Sanders and Warren?
- Will some of the air be taken out of Sanders' sails because Biden isn't onstage?
- How is race raised?
- Who breaks out?
- Without hand-raising, will we get answers that are as clear?
other pre-debate analysis pieces that may be pertinent to you:
- Refinery 29: Everything You Need To Know About The Second Presidential Primary Debate
- Vox: What to expect at the second Democratic presidential debate
- the Guardian: Democratic debates, round two: Sanders and Warren to face off for first time
- POLITICO: Speak up, stand out, get Iowa's attention: What each Dem needs out of Tuesday's debate
- CNN: Progressive frontrunners face off at CNN debate which may also offer opening for centrists
31 votes