LAS VEGAS – Almost three years after a super PAC formed to try to draft Hillary Clinton into the 2016 presidential race, the former secretary of state will finally face off against her Democratic opponents in the party’s first presidential debate here Tuesday night.
Clinton enters the race weaker than many expected she would be not long ago, trailing insurgent Sen. Bernie Sanders in the first-in-the-nation primary state of New Hampshire and with the looming threat of Vice President Joe Biden jumping in the race.
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The debate, sponsored by CNN and set to kick off at 8:30 p.m. ET Tuesday, is the first of six scheduled for the Democrats and will feature five candidates. It will be the first time the candidates are put to the test in an unscripted setting.
How will they fare? Here are seven key questions:
1. Can Clinton live up to the expectations? Hillary Clinton is one of the most experienced presidential debaters in the Democratic Party, having gone 26 rounds with Barack Obama and the rest of an unusually strong field of challengers during the 2008 primary. Sanders has decades of experience as a debater in Vermont, but never on such a high level, never before an audience that doesn’t already know him, and never against an opponent as strong as Clinton.
But Clinton could suffer from the incumbent effect. Incumbent presidents almost always lose their first debate, and Clinton is the closest thing to an incumbent in this race. The first encounter will put challengers on the same plane as the former secretary of state, and she could suffer from expectations set impossibly high by the media and ever her own supporters. That means a win will gain her fewer points than it would for another candidate and a loss will cost her more.
2. How hard will Bernie Sanders go after Clinton? Clinton vs. Sanders is the battle royale in the Democratic Party today. Even though they agree on many policy areas, Sanders and Clinton come at them from completely different world views and theories of change.
Sanders aides say they want their candidate to focus on introducing his message to a wider audience that may not know the Vermonter. And an avowed aversion to negative campaigning suggests he would avoid overt attacks on Clinton.
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But he and his aides have been drawing sharper and sharper contrasts with Clinton in recent days, especially after she came around to his position on issues like the Trans-Pacific Partnership and the Keystone XL pipeline. “What’s next? Will she call herself a democratic socialist?” Sanders spokesperson Michael Briggs quipped to MSNBC Friday.
In a 2006 Senate debate, Sanders jumped up from his seat and began jabbing a finger at his opponent shouting about “people like you” before the audience boos and the debate moderator cut him off.
4) Will Clinton punch down? Clinton is likely to face plenty of incoming blows, but don’t expect her to spend much time punching down to her rivals. At previous Democratic forums, Clinton has entirely ignored her Democratic challengers and focused all of her fire on the Republicans, throwing red meat to the crowd and saying there’s more difference between the Democrats and Republicans than among the Democrats.
Clinton wants to show Democrats that she’s a fighter and the best candidate from their party to face off against Republicans, so she’ll demonstrate her chops by attacking them, not Bernie Sanders.








