New Hampshire Democratic Sen. Jeanne Shaheen accused Republican challenger Scott Brown of “fear mongering” over the Ebola crisis Tuesday in a debate in Concord during which the candidates also clashed over the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria and health care.
The Senate race remains highly competitive in the final stretch, and Democrats are fighting to keep control of the Senate. Shaheen leads Brown by an average of just 2.6 points in recent polls, according to an analysis by RealClearPolitics.
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Brown, whose campaign has focused intensely on national security issues in recent months, accused President Obama of failing to protect Americans from Ebola. “The president said we’re not going to have any issues here, we’re going to stamp it out in its tracks, and we had one person die and two others infected,” Brown said. He argued that the White House needs to implement a complete travel ban on individuals from African countries battling the virus, a move health officials and medical experts have warned could be counterproductive.
Shaheen said she was open to a travel ban “if we can figure out that actually improves the situation” and cited her work as New Hampshire governor instituting safety protocols during the 2001 Anthrax attacks as proof of her credentials. “We need to work together,” she said. “What we don’t need are people who are fear mongering, who are spreading panic in the public, because this is serious.”
“I’m not fear mongering, I’m actually talking about something that’s very important and relevant to people in New Hampshire,” Brown responded.
Brown urged shutting down the United States’ southern border to guard against a possible incursion by terrorists and chided Obama both for not reaching an agreement to keep troops in Iraq earlier and for ruling out ground troops in the future.
“My question to the president and Sen. Shaheen is what happens if airstrikes don’t work?” Brown asked.
Shaheen said she supported confronting ISIS, but accused Brown of hyping threats once again.
“I don’t think we should send [U.S. troops] back as an occupying force as my opponent has suggested,” she said. “We do need to address the threat of ISIS. This is another issue where we need serious people working together in a way that is really going to address this threat, not fear mongering and raising claims that its going to bring down the country.”
RELATED: Republicans slam Ebola response with elections on the horizon
Turning to immigration, moderator Chuck Todd of NBC News’ “Meet the Press” asked Brown to name specific metrics he would use to actually determine whether the border was sufficiently secure.
“You know it’s secure when people don’t come across it,” Brown said.
Shaheen noted that the bipartisan Senate immigration bill she voted for included billions of dollars for fencing and additional border patrol agents.
“If you really want to secure the border then my opponent would take up that Senate bill,” she said.








