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What Went Down At The January Democratic Debate
With his answer on Iran, Sanders is also highlighting his broader foreign policy stance, which is deeply anti-interventionist: “I am able to bring people together to try to create a world where we solve conflicts over the negotiating table, not through military efforts.”
Aaaand we’re off! It’s so interesting to me that Sanders is now trumpeting his foreign policy record (i.e., his anti-Iraq War vote), in part because in 2016 it was seen as his weakness. Obviously he was running against a former secretary of state in Clinton, but it’s just indicative of how much four years changes things.
In the FiveThirtyEight/Ipsos poll conducted this week, 4.3 percent of people said foreign affairs was the most important issue to them in the Democratic primary — up from 2.4 percent before the December debate. Here’s who those respondents thought would be best at handling the issue. (See other results from the poll here.)
Who voters think is best on foreign affairs
Among the 143 respondents who said foreign affairs was the most important issue to them in an Ipsos/FiveThirtyEight poll
| candidate | Share of respondents | |
|---|---|---|
| Joe Biden | 67.8% | |
| Bernie Sanders | 11.7 | |
| Someone else | 7.8 | |
| Elizabeth Warren | 6.1 | |
| Pete Buttigieg | 4.1 | |
| Tom Steyer | 1.5 | |
| Amy Klobuchar | 0.9 |
