DETROIT, Mi. — With a critical primary here on Tuesday, Sunday night’s debate in Flint, Michigan, will be one of Bernie Sanders’ last, best chances to stop front-runner Hillary Clinton’s seemingly inexorable march to the Democratic nomination.
Sanders comes into the faceoff with a bit of momentum after pulling off wins in Kansas and Nebraska’s caucuses on Saturday, and he’s expected to win another caucus in Maine on Sunday. But Clinton ended up with a solid delegate haul of her own by winning Louisiana’s primary by a sweeping margin Saturday.
But those smaller states are worth little compared to Michigan with its 147 pledged delegates. “Now, all eyes turn to Michigan,” Clinton said Saturday night at a Democratic Party dinner after congratulating Sanders on his wins.
Sanders is already falling dangerously behind Clinton in the delegate count, and his path to the nomination gets narrower and narrower by the day unless he can start to beat Clinton in more states by larger margins. The debate is one opportunity for Sanders to shake up the current dynamic of the race.
Both candidates are also looking ahead to contests on March 15, when a group of delegate-rich states will vote, including Ohio, which is similar in many ways to Michigan. Florida will also vote that day, but Clinton and Sanders will face off in another debate just four days prior in Miami.
Here are three major things to look for in tonight’s debate:
Trade war
With its large automotive manufacturing sector, few states have been more impacted by outsourcing than Michigan, and Sanders is banking on his consistent opposition to controversial free trade treaties like NAFTA and the Trans-Pacific Partnership to help him defeat Clinton in the state.
NAFTA, which was signed by Clinton’s husband when he was president, has been blamed for the flow of jobs and manufacturing plants to Mexico, where labor is cheaper. Sanders opposed both NAFTA and the TPP in Congress. Clinton says she thinks NAFTA needs to be renegotiated and came out against TPP last summer after helping to promote an early draft of the deal as secretary of state.
RELATED: Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders clash over trade
That’s not good enough, says Sanders, who has been running ads in Michigan on trade and hitting Clinton’s “disastrous trade policy” regularly on the stump. On Sunday, he wrote an op-ed in the Detroit Free Press decrying the treaties’ impact on Detroit and Flint.
Clinton’s camp, meanwhile, has shot back by noting that Sanders opposed the reauthorization of the Export-Import Bank, which helps manufacturers secure financing to sell goods abroad. And besides, Clinton’s campaign says, she now has the same policy as Sanders: opposition to the TPP and a desire to renegotiate NAFTA.
Trade policy is complicated and largely ignored by many constituencies in the Democratic Party, but for organized labor voters and people directly impacted by outsourcing, there are few issues more emotional and important.
Water crisis
The water crisis in Flint will be front and center in the debate and is the reason the city was chosen as the site for this debate. The candidates have both visited Flint and spoken of the crisis as a shameful exemplar of inequalities in America.









