BOULDER, Colorado — Republican candidates were here in Boulder Wednesday for CNBC’s “Your Money, Your Vote” debate, the third such gathering of the 2016 presidential cycle. As with the previous two, Wednesday’s event will consist of a prime-time debate that includes the 10 highest-polling candidates, and an undercard debate that features four lower tier candidates.
Here’s what to watch for:
1. Will Carson be the top target? While they share a penchant for making outrageous statements, Donald Trump and Dr. Ben Carson couldn’t be more different in terms of style and demeanor. While Carson is soft-spoken and generally avoids attacking his rivals, Trump is an insult generator who keeps the volume knob turned to 11. As a result, the two have mostly ridden parallel tracks in debates, but on Wednesday, they seem headed for a collision.
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Four recent surveys have shown Carson surging into first place in Iowa, knocking Trump out of the top spot, and on Tuesday, a New York Times/CBS poll found Carson taking a narrow lead nationally for the first time since Trump’s initial rise.
Trump, who is obsessed with his standing in polls, has responded with attacks on Carson. Most brazenly, he has floated questions about Carson’s Seventh-day Adventist church. On Tuesday, he also criticized Carson’s plan to replace Medicare with a private savings account, an issue that could come up in the debate, since it will focus on the economy. Carson has since backpedaled on the idea.
While Trump is the most likely candidate to take on Carson, one or more of the other candidates courting Carson’s religious base might chime in as well. Watch out for former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, the field’s most vocal defender of entitlement spending for seniors, who could bring up Carson’s Medicare plan. Also keep an eye out on Ohio Gov. John Kasich, who on Tuesday condemned in fiery terms Carson’s Medicare plan as well as his call for a 10% flat tax.
“You ever heard of anything so crazy as that, telling our people in this country who are seniors or about to be seniors that we’re going to abolish Medicaid and Medicare?” Kasich said at an Ohio event.
RELATED: Ben Carson defends call to ‘redistribute’ school funds nationally
2. Can Bush get off the ropes? No one in Colorado faces more pressure to turn in a strong debate than Bush.
The former front-runner looks weak in the polls not just nationally, not just in crucial New Hampshire, but also in his home state of Florida. His campaign announced last week it would cut payroll by 40% after a disappointing fundraising quarter, and Bush sounds increasingly frustrated by his performance on the trail.
Early polls of primary voters do not have a great record of predicting the eventual winner. But if a candidate tanks in enough of them and fails to inspire in debates, he may not make it to Election Day at all; just look at Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker.
Bush must remind GOP donors why they lined up behind him earlier this year or risk losing elite support to Sen. Marco Rubio or other rivals, a development that could be fatal. It isn’t enough just to hold his own like he did at the Reagan Library debate in September; he needs a standout performance that drives actual movement in the polls.
One topic Bush will be eager to talk about on Wednesday is entitlements. On Tuesday, he released a new plan to means-test Social Security and turn Medicare into a private voucher system with an option to enroll in the traditional public program. It’s a well-tread idea with roots in Rep. Paul Ryan’s proposals. Is that enough to excite Republican voters?
RELATED: Trump confused about his drop in the polls: ‘I don’t get it’
3. Can Carson talk about the economy? Carson has strengthened his position in the polls recently by tossing red meat to social conservatives – sowing doubts about Muslim-American loyalties, clashing with Jewish groups and institutions over whether gun control contributed to the Holocaust, pledging to cut off funding to colleges where professors show “bias” – and then reveling in progressives, pundits, and fact-checkers decrying his theories.
Wednesday’s debate is all about economics and fiscal policy, though, and that’s an area in which Carson has seemed less comfortable. In addition to his evolving Medicare plan, Carson is likely to face questions on the recent deal in Congress to raise the debt ceiling, a topic that has made him look lost in prior interviews.
On Tuesday, Carson pledged never to accept a budget that requires further increases in the debt ceiling, raising tough questions as to how he would eliminate the deficit upon taking office while simultaneously heading off a financial crisis over fears that America will default on its debts. Can he handle them on the debate stage?
RELATED: White House, congressional leaders reach tentative budget deal
4. Where did Carly Fiorina go? Fiorina was the breakout star of the last Republican debate, where she tangled with Trump over sexism and promised to take a hard line on abortion issues. She earned a major boost in the polls for her effort, but it seemed to disappear as quickly as it arrived.
Like Carson, her higher profile came with more scrutiny. Her debate answer on Planned Parenthood, which referenced a video that apparently did not exist, spawned a weeks-long fight with fact checkers while her business record, which included major layoffs, came into focus as well. It’s not clear either of those issues dragged her down, but whatever the cause, she seems to have a hard time maintaining GOP voters’ attention.








