LAS VEGAS – Vice President Joe Biden may have seen his 2016 window close Tuesday night as Hillary Clinton solidified her grip on the top spot in the Democratic field during a compelling first presidential debate here.
If anybody thought Biden was waiting for Clinton to show serious vulnerability, she easily eliminated that concern. With her experienced, commanding and occasionally pointed style, she moved aggressively against top rival Bernie Sanders out of the gate, and made a case for herself and her ideas with an effectiveness that no candidate on the stage could match.
The dynamic of the race did not fundamentally change as Sanders and Clinton staked out their respective turf and demonstrated that they were prepared to defend it, leaving little room for the other three candidates on stage. If anything, the debate widened the gap between the top tier and the rest.
Here are eight takeaways from the night:
1.) Clinton reasserted herself as the strongest candidate in the Democratic field, living up to sky-high expectations and clearly demonstrating why she has almost cleared the field of primary opponents.
Her campaign struggled through the summer, but many Democrats are breathing a sigh of relief after their party’s most likely standard-bearer showed why so much of the party’s leadership has already rallied behind her. Was she the star of the debate? “She was the next president,” Clinton communications director Jenn Palmieri told reporters.
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2.) Sanders proved he is a worthy challenger, capable of going toe-to-toe with Clinton on the biggest stage he’s ever been on and delivering the night’s brightest moment when he declared that Americans are tired of talking about Clinton’s emails.
There were moments he seemed out of his depth, especially on foreign policy, but he displayed the intensity and showcased a message that has attracted tens of thousands of diehard fans to rallies across the country. He consolidated the liberal wing of the Democratic Party and showed he will be a forceful advocate for it.
3.) The seal was broken on conflict in the Democratic primary. While Republicans have been pummeling each other on a daily basis, Democrats have been almost allergic to confront each other directly. But with early exchanges over capitalism and guns in Las Vegas, more fireworks will come soon.
4.) Martin O’Malley was solid, but was it enough? When the former Maryland governor announced his candidacy, he did not expect to enter his first debate at 1% in the polls. He has failed to catch any breaks and needed a strong performance Tuesday night to break through. This was probably not it.








