CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa – After a slow start, the Democratic presidential contest officially began here Friday night.
In front of 1,300 activists, all five of the 2016 Democratic presidential candidates gathered for the first time in one place together. While sparks did not fly on stage, supporters of rival candidates faced off outside and tried to outdo each other inside, while staffers clashed online.
The Iowa Democratic Party Hall of Fame Dinner was the first chance Iowa Democrats, the press, and the candidates themselves had a chance to size up the Democratic field in the flesh.
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Candidates bought tables to the dinner for their supporters, who cheered loudly when their candidate of choice took the stage and sat quietly when rivals spoke.
The candidates themselves were gracious enough to mostly ignore each other in their speeches. Instead, they each took on different opponents, from Republicans to billionaires.
The stakes were high for each candidate, and each came with a different mission. For frontrunner Hilary Clinton, the message was clear: Trust me to take on Republicans in the general election.
“I’m having a great debate already with Republicans,” she said, before blasting their economic policy. “Trickle down economics has to be one of the worst ideas of the 1980s. It is right up there with New Coke, shoulder pads and big hair.”
She lambasted Republicans for saying they’re not scientists when it comes to climate change. “I’m not a scientist either,” she said. “I’m just a grandmother with two eyes and a brain.”
And she mocked “the new Republican frontrunner, Donald Trump,” as “finally a candidate whose hair gets more attention than mine.”
But she made no mention of the Democratic primary and spoke as if she were running in a general election.
Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who is surging the polls, at least acknowledged his rivals. “This is a great team. I thank them all,” Sanders said.
If Clinton went after Republicans, Sanders went after billionaires, calling for a “political revolution” to overthrow them.
Sanders got a typically enthusiastic response, and one of his biggest applause lines came when he spoke about race and policing, a recent addition to his longtime stump speech.
Former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley had a strong showing, with supported organized by both his campaign and super PAC outside chanting taunts at Clinton supporters.
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