The Democrats cross Sanders and Warren: You are helping Donald Trump

Liberal racers who are at the top of the race to win the Democratic Party's nomination were strongly challenged by the most moderate candidates in the second debate to be held in Detroit. The leaders in the presidential race of Democrats, Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren, faced sharp criticism from other candidates who said [...]
The leaders in the presidential race of Democrats, Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren, faced sharp criticism from other candidates who said the party had slipped “on the left”, writes The Guardian, followed Periscope.
On the first night of the debate between democratic candidates in Detroit, Sanders and Warren joined together, defending their ideas as universal healthcare, immigration, etc., that were countered by posters by party centrists.
Former Maryland conventioner John Delaney, who is struggling to make ends meet in the polls, accused Warren and Sanders of promising “bad policies” that, in his words, “threatened impossible things that would eventually make independent voters re-election Trump”.
Warren had responded by saying that the Democrats could not win the White House “with little ideas and standing as the academic”.
The second debate among 10 other candidates, including former Vice President Joe Biden and California Senator Kamala Harris, will be held tonight.
Warren and Sanders avoided conflict with each other by trying to protect their policies from other Democrats.
The two senators and longtime friends were also challenged by the senator of Minnesota Amy Klobuchar and Ohio Congressman Tim Ryan, next by John Hickenloper and Steve Bullock. While Pete Buttigigeg and Beto O'Rourke didn't find themselves around here or there. /Periscope











