2020 Daily Trail Markers: Candidates make final pitch before Iowa caucuses

FAN Editor

A campaign that started more than two years ago and featured more than 2,200 candidate events is down to its final weekend in Iowa. On Monday night, Iowa will officially kick off the presidential nominating process with its first-in-the-nation caucuses. 

There has been a clear top tier of Democratic hopefuls in Iowa since the early fall: former Vice President Joe Biden, former South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg, Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders and Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren. Two of those candidates, Sanders and Warren, have been stuck in Washington for the impeachment trial the past two weeks, while Biden and Buttigieg have been able to camp out in the state. Senator Amy Klobuchar, who has also been in Washington for impeachment, has been working to break into that top tier for several months. 

All the major candidates are blanketing the state this weekend and making their closing arguments to fire up supporters and try to win over some of the voters still trying to make up their minds. 

Read more here.

THE DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATES’ CLOSING IOWA ARGUMENTS

BERNIE SANDERS

Bernie Sanders has seen a boost in support in the weeks leading up to the caucuses and sat atop many of the polls that have come out in January. While he has been one of the candidates stuck in Washington, his campaign has flooded the state with high level surrogates like Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, filmmaker Michael Moore, and Sanders’ wife, Dr. Jane Sanders. The Vermont senator has spent some of his final days in Iowa stressing that his “political revolution” can begin here. 

“The entire world will be watching…to see if people of this state are prepared to fight back,” Sanders said in Storm Lake on Sunday, according to CBS News Campaign Reporter Cara Korte. He has also emphasized that the Democratic “establishment” is worried about the strength of his movement.  “We are their worst nightmare! This is their ‘Nightmare on Elm Street,'” Sanders said in Sioux City on Sunday, Korte reports.  

If Sanders is successful on Monday night it will show that caucus-goers back his message of changing the system and believe he will fight for issues that matter to working class Americans. The campaign also has an aggressive ground game in Iowa, one that includes hundreds of staffers and volunteers spread across the state looking to turn out his fervent supporters and first-time caucus-goers. Although it is a comparatively small demographic in the state, the campaign’s outreach with Latino voters in the state could also prove to be essential come Caucus Night. 

JOE BIDEN

Joe Biden has spent months making the case to Iowans, in person and in advertisements, that he’s best suited to take on President Trump in a general election and “restore the soul of the nation.” In the days leading up to the caucuses, advertisements have emphasized Biden’s poll numbers against Trump and stressed that “this is no time to take a risk. We need our strongest candidate.” 

Biden has repeatedly said the values that uphold American democracy are on the line and he’s in the strongest position to restore them. 

“Character is on the ballot,” Biden said in Waukee on Thursday in a speech aimed at President Trump, according to CBS News Campaign Reporter Bo Erickson. “Does it matter if a president lies? Does it matter if a president has no moral compass? Does it matter if a president believes they’re above the law? Does it matter if a president is petty? Mean? Cruel? Spiteful? Does the character of a president matter? I believe the answer to each and every one of those questions is yes.” 

Biden has also highlighted his ability to withstand a barrage of attacks from Republicans, especially after some have questioned whether it was appropriate for his son Hunter to sit on the board of a Ukrainian energy company.  “They have thrown everything but the kitchen sink so far,” Biden said in Iowa City on Monday. “And I’m just gonna say it…I’m still standing and just getting stronger.” Biden also ramped up his visits to Iowa in December and January while focusing more time on smaller and mid-sized communities.

If Biden is successful on Monday night, his campaign will argue that voters believe he has the best chance of beating Mr. Trump. While many important issues come up in conversations with Iowans, polls suggest caucus-goers are more concerned about finding an electable candidate. The Biden campaign hopes those Iowans will turn out for the former vice president. 

PETE BUTTIGIEG

Pete Buttigieg’s argument is that he has the ability to unite the country and appeal to moderate voters, including “future former Republicans.” Buttgieg, the other top candidate who has been free to roam Iowa during impeachment, has made final trips to some of the counties that voted twice for President Obama before switching to Mr. Trump, and the campaign has emphasized their organizing strength in Iowa’s pivot counties. 

The Midwestern former mayor has argued that it will take nominating someone from outside Washington for Democrats to win in November. He also has pushed back against criticism that he lacks the experience to be president. And in the final days before the Iowa caucuses, Buttigieg began to draw finer distinctions between himself and some of his top rivals.  

“I hear Vice President Biden saying that this is no time to take a risk on someone new,” Buttigieg said in Decorah on Thursday, according to CBS News Reporter Jack Turman. “But history has shown us that the biggest risk we could take with a very important election coming up, is to look to the same Washington playbook and recycle the same arguments and expect that to work against a president like Donald Trump, who is new in kind.” 

At another stop, Turman reports, Buttigieg again went after Biden and Sanders. He framed Sanders’ vision as a “revolution” where “nothing counts unless you go all the way.” Buttigieg took on two of Sanders’ signature policy proposals: “Medicare for All,” the ambitious and expensive plan for the government to provide health care to all Americans, and free public college.

If Buttigieg prevails on Monday, it will show there’s a desire among some voters for a more moderate message carried by a new voice. The campaign’s focus on rural areas and swing counties, combined with aggressive campaign schedule in the final few days, will give many Iowans one more chance to hear from him before making up their minds. He also built an extensive field operation, with 34 offices placed around the state. 

ELIZABETH WARREN

Elizabeth Warren, who has also been tied up with the impeachment trial, has sent a flood of surrogates to the state, including former Democratic rival Julian Castro. She built up an early operation in Iowa, but has seen poll numbers dip since the fall. At events in Iowa last weekend, Warren addressed the electability argument head on and stressed that she believes Democrats need to nominate a woman to beat Mr. Trump. 

“We now know that women candidates have been outperforming men candidates since Donald Trump was elected,” Warren said in Davenport on Sunday, according to CBS News Campaign Reporter Zak Hudak. Warren also reintroduced her argument, which she frequently made over the summer, that she’s a “fighter” who can defeat Mr. Trump and deliver progressive victories in Washington. 

“We have to decide whether to give into the fear or whether to fight back,” Warren said on Saturday in Muscatine. “Me, I’m fighting back. That’s why I’m in this.”

If Warren is successful on Caucus Night, it will be partly due to her organizing strength in the state. Her team built a large operation early in the process and deployed organizers around the state before many campaigns built out their Iowa infrastructure. Her broad range of policy proposals has resonated with voters around the state, even if they don’t agree with all of her views. 

AMY KLOBUCHAR

Amy Klobuchar has pitched herself as a candidate with a strong electoral record and Midwestern roots. At nearly every event she has told people that she has won “every race, every place, every time” and talks about the “surge” she sees in Iowa in polls and her endorsements. 

She has emphasized that she believes the election is a “decency check” on Mr. Trump and in order to send a strong message, Democrats need to “win big.” “Last thing that I will say is just that we want to win,” Klobuchar said in Waterloo on Sunday. “And my profound advice to you is we’d better not screw this up. And we better put someone at the top of the ticket, and this is my piece for me, someone at the top of the ticket that has the record of bringing people with her and winning big.” 

While she’s been in Washington for the impeachment trial, her family members and local legislative endorsers have held events on her behalf. Klobuchar has also urged supporters to help push her into the top tier while she’s busy with the impeachment trial by volunteering for her campaign. And she’s told undecided Iowans to call friends and family in Minnesota for a performance review. 

If Klobuchar is successful on Monday, it will likely be because her decision to tour every corner of the state, her focus on pursuing more moderate policies, and her message of uniting the country at a time of deep partisan division. She has campaigned relentlessly, holding more events than any other candidate in the top tier, and her campaign believes they’ll see an advantage in rural areas because they visited every one of Iowa’s 99 counties. 

ANDREW YANG

Andrew Yang is approaching the end of a of a 17-day swing across Iowa. Yang has been campaigning on a message that a changing economy requires a different perspective in Washington to ensure Americans aren’t left behind. He’s promised that a win in Iowa will also mean a victory in New Hampshire. 

TOM STEYER

Tom Steyer has presented himself as the “unconventional” politician who can go head-to-head with President Trump on the economy. Steyer also points to his work building grassroots coalitions and reminds Iowans at nearly every town hall that he’s the only candidate who will make tackling climate change his number one priority.

UP FOR DEBATE

The Democratic National Committee is switching the qualifications for candidates to participate in the Nevada Democratic presidential primary debate, including eliminating the unique donor threshold, which paves the way for Mike Bloomberg to potentially qualify for future presidential debates. 

To make the debate stage in Las Vegas on February 19, CBS News Political Unit associate producer Sarah Ewall-Wice says candidates need to meet either a new polling threshold or received pledged delegates. Presidential hopefuls must receive either 10% in four state or national polls or 12% in two state polls out of either Nevada or South Carolina from a list released by the DNC. Those polls must be released between February 15 and 11:59 p.m. ET on February 18. 

Alternatively, candidates can qualify based on pledged delegates. Those delegates will be awarded based on the results of the Iowa caucuses on February 3 as calculated and reported by the Iowa Democratic Party or the New Hampshire primary on February 11 as calculated and reported by the Associated Press. 

Based on a CBS News analysis, only three candidates are currently qualified to participate: Joe Biden, Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren. All candidates have until February 18 to qualify. 

For the first time, there is no unique donor threshold to help candidates qualify for the debate. This could benefit billionaire Mike Bloomberg who has said he would not seek donations for his presidential bid. The requirement has kept him off the debate stage in the past. He has not yet reached the polling threshold but has ticked up in support in polls released in recent weeks. 

“We are thrilled that voters could soon have the chance to see Mike Bloomberg on the debate stage, hear his vision for the country, and see why he is the strongest candidate to defeat Donald Trump and bring our country together,” Bloomberg’s campaign manager Kevin Sheekey said in a statement. “Mike has run for office three times and never taken a dime from special interests, allowing him to act independently, on the merits, without having to do what donors expect. He is proud to be doing the same with this campaign.” 

Other campaigns including Sanders’ and Steyers’ have slammed the decision to remove a donor qualification, calling it “wrong.”

Read more here.

BIDEN TAKES NOTE OF TIMING IN BOLTON MANUSCRIPT

Former national security adviser John Bolton’s book manuscript has piqued the interest of Joe Biden, who mentioned it today at a campaign stop in Fort Madison, Iowa, CBS News campaign reporter Bo Erickson noted. It’s the timing that caught his attention. According to a New York Times report, “in early May” last year, President Trump told Bolton to call the Ukrainian president, a political neophyte who had just won the presidency, in order to ensure that he’d meet with the president’s personal attorney, Rudy Giuliani. 

Just about an hour and twenty minutes before the Senate voted not to call witnesses, including Bolton, Biden told the crowd that he was in the race “in May,” and according to the transcript, the president “instructed Bolton to go to the Ukrainians and try to dig up dirt on Joe Biden.” (h/t CBS News Political Unit broadcast associate Aaron Navarro). The former vice president was likely referring to the fact that it’s Giuliani who has been alleging and investigating, on Mr. Trump’s behalf, corruption allegations of Joe and Hunter Biden related to Ukraine. No evidence of criminal wrongdoing on the part of either Biden has surfaced.

Earlier this week, the Times reported that Bolton had written in his book draft that the president had told him in August that he wanted to continue the pause in military aid to Ukraine until officials helped with investigations into Democrats including Biden. 

Biden declared he was running for president on April 25, days before the meeting described by Bolton. 

STATE-BY-STATE

NEVADA

Cory Booker’s former supporters are picking new favorites in Nevada this week, among the new endorsements rolled out Friday by the Elizabeth Warren and Joe Biden campaigns. Included are two women of color in the state: state Assemblywoman Selena Torres, now backing Biden, and Reno-Sparks NAACP President Patricia Gallimore, now behind WarrenCBS News Campaign Reporter Alex Tin says a quarter of the Nevada’s Democratic electorate is estimated to be women of color, with 22% of likely caucus-goers in the demographic still undecided in a recent poll by advocacy group She the People in the state. Biden and Bernie Sanders virtually tied for the lead in the survey, with only Warren (10%) and Tom Steyer (14%) also clearing double digits.

MONEY MATTERS

SPENDING SPREE

Former New York Mayor Mike Bloomberg filed his fourth-quarter FEC report.  Although he was late entering the Democratic field, launching at the end of November, his campaign spent nearly $188 million, including over $140 million dollars on television and digital advertising says CBS News Campaign Reporter Tim Perry

“Our first month’s filing represents a down payment and commitment in all 50 states to defeat Donald Trump, and it shows we have the resources and plan necessary to take him on,” Bloomberg 2020 Campaign Manager Kevin Sheekey said in a statement released by the campaign.

Other expenses include $14 million in payments to his private company Bloomberg LP.  A campaign aide tells CBS News that these expenses include air travel, as Mayor Bloomberg travels on a plane owned by Bloomberg LP and it also includes personnel costs, for employees who switched over to Bloomberg’s presidential campaign. Hawkfish LLC, a tech start-up launched by Bloomberg also received $12 million for its advertising work for the campaign. The campaign also disclosed $679,000 in spending for some campaign staffers living in New York City, the location of the campaign headquarters. Housing and furniture were offered to some staffers who relocated to the city, regardless of seniority.  The campaign listed the merchandise it sold as “other receipts,” saying that the products were “union-made in the USA,” and priced at cost.

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