Democrats want a presidential nominee who can defeat President Donald Trump. But after nine series of debates, Democratic voters still don't know who that candidate is.
Former Vice President Joe Biden held the honor for many months but slipped precipitously after poor performances in Iowa and New Hampshire's contests and amid lackluster fundraising.
Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont is moving from movement candidate to most-electable candidate, but many in the party worry Sanders, if nominated, would lose the presidency and take the House down with him. In addition, Sanders is not a Democrat.
Billionaire businessman Michael Bloomberg has seen meteoric rises in polls after spending hundreds of millions of dollars on ads, but that was before he got verbally body slammed at Wednesday night's debate by Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts.
Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont is moving from movement candidate to most-electable candidate, but many in the party worry Sanders, if nominated, would lose the presidency and take the House down with him. In addition, Sanders is not a Democrat.
Billionaire businessman Michael Bloomberg has seen meteoric rises in polls after spending hundreds of millions of dollars on ads, but that was before he got verbally body slammed at Wednesday night's debate by Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts.
The contentious, and at times chaotic, debate underscored the upheaval in a party that hasn't settled on a vision for its future, with a single exception – a world that does not have Trump in a decision-making role.
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