Kamala Harris Shuts Down Debate Squabble With Raised Hands

Joe Biden vowed to roll back the tax cuts passed under Donald Trump as he and nine other Democrats opened up a second night of debates with a series of attacks on the president, setting out the contrasts that voters will face next year.”Donald Trump thinks Wall Street built America.Ordinary middle-class Americans built America,” Biden said. “Donald Trump has put us in a horrible situation.”

The former vice president had been asked to address recent comments he made promising not to demonize the wealthy but instead ducked it to discuss what he wants to do. Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, meanwhile, said he would raise taxes on the wealthy and even on the middle class to pay for his Medicare for all plan.

“Yes they will pay more in taxes but less in health care for what they get,” he said. The back-and-forth came early on at the second night of the first debate of the Democrats’ presidential nominating process, as party voters begin to get a clearer view of the ideological choices they’ll face in caucuses and primaries early next year.

The candidates on the stage quickly got into testy exchanges, talking over each other, until Senator Kamala Harris stepped in.

“America doesn’t want to witness a food fight, they want to know how we’re going to put food on their tables,” Harris said, putting an end to the squabble.

Thursday night’s debate in Miami was the first side-by-side appearance of the campaign for Biden and Sanders, and the contrasts between the two are being carefully watched as they chart starkly different paths to the party’s nomination and beyond that, the 2020 general election.

Sanders, an independent senator from Vermont, has already begun highlighting where he diverges with Biden, aiming to expose the former vice president’s weaknesses with left-leaning voters on issues such as Medicare for All and the Green New Deal.

The debate is giving voters a chance to see four of the five top-polling candidates for the Democratic nomination interacting with one another, plus half a dozen candidates who’ve averaged 1% or less in key state and national polling.

Biden and Sanders, two white male septuagenarians, are positioned at podiums in the middle of the stage, flanked by younger, more diverse opponents.

On one side is the 37-year-old openly gay mayor of South Bend, Indiana, Pete Buttigieg, and on the other is Senator Harris of California, 54, an African- and Indian-American woman.

Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren, who’s edging out Sanders for second in a growing number of polls, was the only candidate among the leading contenders who ended up on Wednesday’s debate stage.