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Poll Bot

Poll Bot here, ready to reCAPTCHA your attention with some more interesting polls during the debate tonight! ┗┃・ ■ ・┃┛

Nathaniel Rakich

The candidates have come out on stage! Feels weird to be live blogging about the presidential election instead of impeachment!

Nate Silver

Who I’m Also Watching: Pete Buttigieg

Welp, this debate is an awfully big moment for Buttigieg, who has risen to the top of various polls in Iowa and New Hampshire and is now a serious contender for the nomination.

Perhaps uniquely among the candidates, Buttigieg creates a more chaotic field because he potentially draws support from the two candidates previously seen as the front-runners: Biden and Warren. Buttigieg’s policies are comparatively moderate and often overlap heavily with Biden’s — although both candidates have platforms to the left of the ones President Obama ran on in 2008 and 2012. Demographically, however, Buttigieg’s mostly white, affluent supporters look more like Warren’s than Biden’s, who mainly draws his support from working-class whites and African Americans. Conversely, Buttigieg does not have much overlap with Sanders, so he may actually help Sanders by dragging Warren and Biden down to the pack. In Iowa, for instance, Sanders’s 17-ish percent support is more powerful when no one else has more than 20 percent or so.

So how should Buttigieg handle himself? It depends on who and what he’s engaging with:

  • I think Buttigieg might actually welcome attacks from the left on policy if Warren and Sanders choose to go there. Usually a fairly affable debater, Buttigieg instigated conflict with Warren last time by positioning himself to her right. That seems to have worked, more or less: Polls find an increasing number of Iowa voters think that Warren is too liberal. At the same time, Buttigieg doesn’t want to go too far to the center and alienate voters who recently converted to him from Warren, and who may not be die-hard lefties but are not Joe Manchin-esque centrists either. Emphasizing that his ideas are continuations of Obama’s — a strategy Biden often employs — could do the trick.
  • Attacks from Biden or others — maybe from Klobuchar, who would love to be the one surging in Iowa — on his age and experience could be more of a challenge. Fundamentally, Buttigieg’s résumé is unusual for a presidential nominee — and short on experience in high-profile elected office. And, perhaps relatedly, voters aren’t particularly confident that he can beat Trump. But such attacks on Buttigieg have the potential to backfire. If they come from Biden or Sanders, they may remind voters of how old Biden and Sanders are. And some voters may not necessarily see Washington experience as virtue. But these are questions that Buttigieg is almost certain to face, from the moderators or from other candidates, given the impressive résumés of some of the other candidates on stage.
  • A third line of attack could involve Buttigieg’s record on racial issues or his lack of support among black voters. Such conversations could produce unpredictable effects on public opinion, as Harris’s critiques of Biden’s racial record did in the first debate. But they could also be some of the hardest criticisms for Buttigieg to defend; in my view, anyway, he’s often been a bit tin-eared on issues around race in previous debates.

Overall, I don’t think Buttigieg needs any particular gimmicks. He probably wants to come across as affable and humble and avoid playing into any “boy genius” caricatures. (Don’t speak Norweigian on stage, for instance.) To the extent he’s playing offense or counter-punching aggressively, it should be on policy substance, where his positions are fairly well-calibrated relative to the Democratic electorate.

But this is one of those debates where the media is going to be strongly inclined to place Buttigieg at the center of the narrative one way or another — and that puts things somewhat outside his control. A marginal misstep in the first 15 minutes could be blown up into something much bigger than it was, or just as easily, a merely competent performance could be described by cable pundits as a masterful, game-changing one.


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