MANCHESTER, New Hampshire — For the first time, the two leading 2016 Democratic presidential candidates will face off one-on-one in a debate, hosted by MSNBC Thursday night at 9 p.m. ET in New Hampshire, just days before the state’s first-in-the-nation primary.
The debate, slotted during the critical week between the Iowa Caucuses and the New Hampshire primary, comes as the candidates have been exchanging fire on who is a real progressive in the race and on who is the bigger underdog.
RELATED: Here’s how to watch the Democratic debate on MSNBC
It’s also the first of four additional Democratic debates, which were added to the debate calendar this week after months of resistance from the Democratic National Committee to revisit the debate schedule.
With a whopping 48% of the Democratic electorate saying they made up their mind in the final week before the election in 2008’s Democratic primary, the stakes are high for both candidates. Here are four dynamics at play:
A clearer picture of the race
Even though Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders have been the only candidates to gain traction since the very beginning, this is the first time they will be alone on stage without the distraction of a lesser known candidate.
Former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley, who was often combative with the other candidates and the moderators, dropped out of the race Monday, the night of the Iowa Caucuses. The new dynamic will give a clearer picture of the race, allowing the two candidates to have sharper contrasts on stage with each other that bring into focus their differences without the noise a long-shot rival.
Who is a progressive?
The question of purity versus pragmatism is at the core of the test Democrats face in picking a presidential nominee, and the candidates have been debating in recent days what it means to be a progressive. The deabte came after Sanders told MSNBC’s Kasie Hunt Tuesday that Clinton is a progressive only “some days.”
Clinton and her campaign fired back aggressively Tuesday. She called the comment a “low blow” Tuesday on the stump and in a forum televised by CNN, said Sanders is not a “gatekeeper” of progressivism.
Follow the updates live from tonight’s debate right here








