LAS VEGAS – Hillary Clinton and top rival Bernie Sanders clashed repeatedly on Wall Street reform, gun safety and the definition of American capitalism Tuesday night here at the first Democratic presidential debate of the 2016 campaign.
It was the first evidence of real conflict in the Democratic contest, which until now has found the major candidates — Clinton and Sanders — reluctant to mix it up or criticize one another. Clinton, the former secretary of state who has seen her once-robust lead in national and state polls wane in recent months while Sanders has surged, showed a willingness to ding the Vermont senator on a range of issues.
But Clinton, whose campaign has been bogged down over questions about her use of a private email server as secretary of state, also received a lift from Sanders when she was asked anew about the email controversy by CNN anchor Anderson Cooper. Clinton reiterated her contention that she had done nothing wrong and that it was time to move on from the matter.
“The secretary is right,” Sanders said. “The American people are sick and tired of hearing about your damn emails,” Sanders said to wild applause. Beaming, Clinton thanked Sanders as the two shook hands.
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Chafee was the only candidate to take the bait, going off on a tear on Clinton’s emails. Asked by Cooper if she cared to respond, Clinton replied simply: “No.”
The email exchange was a brief moment of detente between Clinton and Sanders.
The fireworks began when Sanders, who describes himself as a democratic socialist, was pointedly asked by moderator Anderson Cooper about whether his views would render him unelectable.
Clinton, a former first lady and former New York senator, came armed with research on the Vermont senator’s voting record, noting that he had voted five times against the Brady handgun bill in Congress, and saying he wanted to give immunity to gun manufactures from lawsuits.
Clinton even challenged Sanders on Wall Street reform — a policy area squarely in his wheelhouse.
The two take different approaches to reining in the financial industry, with Sanders focusing on breaking up the big banks and Clinton proposing a suite of more nuanced reforms on a wider swath of financial institutions.
Clinton said Sanders’ idea would not accomplish what he claims it would, and said hers is stronger. “If only you look at the big banks, you might miss the forest for tress,” she said.
Sanders had none of it, calling Clinton’s Wall Street reform plan “naive,” adding, “Congress doesn’t regulate wall street. Wall street regulates Congress.”
Clinton, who narrowly lost her bid for the 2008 Democratic nomination to Barack Obama, was the focus of much of the two-hour program, televised nationally by CNN.
Sanders and other opponents on the stage including former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley and former Rhode Island Governor Lincoln Chafee all aggressively pounced on Clinton’s biggest weakness on foreign policy – her vote for the Iraq War in 2002, which she has since called a mistake. She noted that President Obama had named her America’s top diplomat even after criticizing her position on the war throughout the 2008 contest.
O’Malley, unprompted, even brought up the Benghazi terror attack, a top Republican talking point.








