After months of giddily watching Hillary Clinton stumble through her campaign launch, Republicans are suddenly confronting something new: a Democratic front-runner with momentum.
Clinton’s widely praised performance in Tuesday’s Democratic debate was the exclamation point capping a rare week of favorable news for the candidate, who has been plagued throughout the year by the twin challenges of an e-mail scandal and an energetic challenge from Bernie Sanders on her left. Some 15 million viewers tuned in for the event, 50% more than the previous record for a Democratic debate set by Clinton and Barack Obama in 2008.
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Her strong showing — and its attendant attention in the press – came not long after Congressman Kevin McCarthy linked the House’s Benghazi investigation to Clinton’s poll numbers. He withdrew his bid for speaker amid backlash for the remarks. In addition, a staffer for the select committee on Benghazi has since popped up claiming he was fired for objecting to its focus on Clinton, prompting the committee to accuse him of airing a phony dispute to settle scores over his poor performance. Clinton is set to testify before the committee on Oct. 22 and suddenly has an edge heading into what’s sure to be a contentious grill session.
Even one of her Republican rivals had nice things to say — and he’s not known for saying nice things. “Like her or not, she did her job,” Trump told MSNBC’s “Morning Joe,” before telling NBC News later that she’d be a “formidable” debating opponent.
In another surprising move, Trump focused his fire not on Clinton the next morning, but on Bernie Sanders. After praising Sanders for his similar take on trade earlier in the week, Trump released an Instagram video of Black Lives Matter protesters interrupting a Sanders speech as evidence he is not “a tough, strong leader.”
The Republican field has emphasized bashing Obama at least as much as Clinton, if not more, but Clinton’s performance could put a bigger spotlight on how the candidates might match up individually.
“You end up with a situation where Republicans say, which one of these guys can cut her head off?” GOP strategist Rick Wilson told MSNBC. “Which one of these guys can knock her flat? The value of a strong debater will emerge as a singular consideration.”
Sure enough, Republican contenders made a point of playing up their potential against Clinton on Wednesday.
RELATED: Trump slams Sanders: He’s all talk on trade
Rubio responded to the debate by emailing to supporters a claim from Ed Klein — the conservative author notorious for producing “inside” scoops on Clinton that don’t pass a laugh test — that Bill Clinton thinks Rubio would be the former secretary of state’s toughest foil.
“I think the biggest threat to her candidacy is her outdated ideas,” Rubio said on Fox News on Wednesday. “If you watched that debate last night, it looked like something from the early ’80s. It was basically a liberal versus liberal debate about who was going to give away the most free stuff.”
Dr. Ben Carson’s campaign took to Twitter to point out a recent Fox News poll showing him with an 11-point lead in a general election match-up — by far the best of any Republican tested. A spokesman for Carly Fiorina emailed MSNBC to highlight an October NBC News/Wall Street Journal/Marist poll showing Fiorina up 14 points over Clinton in Iowa, also the best among Republicans named in the survey.
Conservative commentators, while mostly crediting Clinton with a solid debate, generally downplayed its significance in a general election. As several pointed out, she faced virtually no pushback from her rivals on her use of a private e-mail server — Sanders even declared “the American people are sick and tired of hearing about your damn emails.”
“I would have taken her to task for that, and if she wins the nomination and if I win the nomination, trust me, this is not going to end,” Jeb Bush said on Fox on Wednesday.
Citizens United President David Bossie, a longtime Clinton opponent, also stressed the gulf between Clinton’s sparring partners on Tuesday and the Republican members of Congress who will conduct this month’s hearing.








