CNN hosts town halls with Sanders, Buttigieg, | CNN Politics

CNN hosts town halls with Sanders, Buttigieg, Klobuchar and Patrick

01 deval patrick town hall 0206
Deval Patrick says he traded advice with Obama
02:57 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

24 Posts

Patrick defends his time at Bain Capital private investment firm

President Barack Obama hammered Mitt Romney in 2012 over the Republican nominee’s track record in the financial industry.

The specific focus: Romney’s firm, Bain Capital.

On Thursday night, Deval Patrick was asked about his own time there, and whether he could regulate a world he so recently inhabited.

Patrick answered by arguing that his work at Bain was different from what the company is better known for – that he was in it for the greater good.

Patrick ticked off some of the investments he made, framing them as the kind that benefit both big business and the public good.

“Capitalism has a lot to answer for,” Patrick eventually conceded. “We’ve been practicing a kind of capitalism in this country for a long time that was all about short term gains, next quarter’s results; sometimes I think without due interest for the enterprise of the people in the community and the planet.”

Watch:

Patrick says he and Obama "have traded advice" about running for President

Deval Patrick described his relationship with former President Barack Obama on Thursday, telling people in New Hampshire that the two friends “have traded advice” on the methods of running for office.

Some of the most pointed advice Obama offered Patrick, he said, was about how difficult running for President could be.

Patrick has been compared to Obama throughout his career, in part because both have leaned on their personal stories and ties to Chicago to rise to political power throughout their career. Patrick’s first campaign for governor was helmed by political consultants David Axelrod and David Plouffe and his slogan – “Together We Can” – was seen as a precursor to Obama’s hopeful message in 2008.

And the two Democrats remain close to this day – and Patrick said on Thursday that they had known each other for 15 years.

“He was incredibly helpful,” Patrick said of Obama’s role in his first gubernatorial run. “We have traded advice, not so much on policy, because we’re aligned pretty generally on policy, but on method, really, about the importance of running and connecting at the grassroots, about the importance of inviting people from the sidelines to come in and take responsibility for their own civic and political life.”

Watch more:

Patrick says he tips his hat to Romney over impeachment vote 

Deval Patrick said Wednesday he tips his hat to Utah Sen. Mitt Romney, who was the sole Republican to vote to convict the President on the first article of impeachment, abuse of power. 

“I commend all of the members of the House and the Senate who took this, this whole episode with a sense of sobriety that was intended, including, by the way, if I may say, Senator Romney, who stepped up. And I tip my hat to him,” Patrick said of Romney. Both Patrick and Romney are former governors of Massachusetts.

Romney joined with all Senate Democrats in a 52-48 not guilty vote on the abuse of power article of impeachment. Romney voted with Republicans against the obstruction of Congress charge, which fell along straight party lines, 53-47 for acquittal.

“It would have been wrong, I think, for members of the House not to take this up, in my view. And it was right for it to be taken up in the Senate,” Patrick said. 

Watch:

Klobuchar says she was disappointed in senators who voted to acquit Trump 

Amy Klobuchar said she was disappointed in her Senate colleagues who voted on Wednesday to acquit President Donald Trump on articles of impeachment. 

“It made me sad because I know that they know better. I know they know exactly what went on here,” Klobuchar said. 

Utah Sen. Mitt Romney was the sole Republican to vote to convict the President on the first article of impeachment, abuse of power, joining with all Senate Democrats in a 52-48 not guilty vote. Romney voted with Republicans against the obstruction of Congress charge, which fell along straight party lines, 53-47 for acquittal.

CNN’s Don Lemon asked the senator, “Take me back to that moment in the Senate chambers when you had to vote guilty. You said you wanted to cry. What was that like?” 

Klobuchar said, “I was thinking about my own role in this journey, and how I feel so strongly that we need someone that understands that the role of a president is to unite instead of incite, that understands that you put the interests of our country before your private interests or your partisan interests, which really what this case is about.”

The senator said she doesn’t believe the US can take four more years of Trump as president. 

“Our democracy can’t take another four years as (Trump) bulldozes through it. Our law can’t take another four years. Our rule of law, as he thinks he’s above it. And the American dream can’t take another four years of a president who thinks he can choose who gets it,” Klobuchar said. 

Watch more:

Klobuchar on future of campaign: "Every single time I have exceeded expectations"

Amy Klobuchar, asked about the future of her campaign, said that she was happy with her top five finish in Iowa, but that she needs to continue exceeding expectations to turn in a strong performance in New Hampshire.

Klobuchar invested heavily in Iowa and needs a similarly strong performance in New Hampshire to keep her campaign going.

“We are surging and we are surging because people have stepped back and say, you know what, maybe I want a candidate that’s actually going to get things done. That has my back,” she said. “And I’ve always told people, if you are tired of the extremes in our politics and you are tired of the noise and the nonsense, you have a home with me.”

Left unsaid in Klobuchar’s answer is the uphill climb she faces after New Hampshire. Polls show her with little support in Nevada and South Carolina and lacking serious organization in states that begin voting in March.

Watch:

The town hall with Amy Klobuchar has begun

Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar has taken the stage. CNN’s Don Lemon is moderating.

Buttigieg discusses previously believing that being gay would keep him out of politics

Pete Buttigieg said Thursday that while he – at one point in his life – thought being gay would have kept him out of politics, he now sees how his identity “is actually very much part of the impact I get to have now.”

Buttigieg is the first top tier gay candidate from a major American political party and his lead in Iowa has been seen as a seminal moment in the advancement of LGBTQ rights in the United States.

Buttigieg, who came out in an op-ed in 2015, has reluctantly embraced his unlikely role as a symbol of LGBTQ progress. While he speaks about it across the country, it is not central to his candidacy, nor is it something that regularly comes up at events.

And he wrote in his pre-campaign memoir that he worried that his coming out would define him beyond what he had accomplished in his young life.

“I had strongly supported the causes from the beginning, but did not want to be defined by them,” he wrote of LGBTQ rights.

But now that Buttigieg has delivered a strong showing in Iowa, Buttigieg says that “young people who question whether they fit in in their own family, in their community” see him running for president as a sign that they could do the same.

“I think the fact that I’m standing here, the fact that my husband’s in the audience watching right now is just an amazing example of that belief that that yes, yes, you belong. And this country has a place for you,” he said.

Watch:

Buttigieg on mental health issues: “I will be a president who will give voice to those struggles”

Pete Buttigieg on Thursday said if elected president, he would give voice to mental health struggles and empower local organizations and communities in the US to deliver solutions. 

An undecided voter in New Hampshire told Buttigieg at the CNN town hall, “In June, I lost my daughter Abigail. Despite working in the field, it was a struggle to access adequate evidence-based treatment. I had to fly her across the country to access services which were often times not provided in an evidence-based way.” 

“Having recently lost a child to inadequate mental health and substance abuse services,” she continued, “what strategies do you support to eliminate the disparities between mental health and physical health services?”

Buttigieg responded, “First of all, I’m so sorry for the loss of your daughter, and I admire your being prepared to stand up and talk about that loss.”

“I think the first thing that has to change – before we get to the policy, I’ll come to the policy in a moment – but the first thing that has to change is a willingness to talk about this, because mental health struggles affect every family,” he continued.

Buttigieg said the American people need to create a culture “where it is as acceptable to talk about struggling with bipolar disorder as it would be to talk about a fight with cancer, where it is as routine to seek an emotional health checkup as it is a physical.”

“If we make that change in how we talk about and think about serious mental illness and addiction, that makes it so much easier to get the policy right. And I will be a president who will give voice to those struggles,” he said. 

Buttigieg said there needs to be a build-up of mental health providers in the country. He also said technology can be better used to assist in providing mental health care, and that he would use federal funds for “healing and belonging grants” in local communities.

“We will empower local health departments, local communities, and local organizations seeking to deliver those solutions and make sure that they get funding to help them as they do,” Buttigieg said. 

Watch more:

Buttigieg: Trump's attacks on Romney were "disgraceful"

Pete Buttigieg said Thursday that President Donald Trump attacking Utah Sen. Mitt Romney over his vote in favor of ousting the President was “disgraceful.”

Trump took veiled shots at Romney at the National Prayer Breakfast on Thursday, telling the assembled religious leaders and politicians that he didn’t “like people who use their faith as justification for doing what they know is wrong.”

Buttigieg added: “The silver lining is this is 2020. This is an election year. And so, the Senate may have been the jury yesterday but we, the people, are the jury now. And the final verdict on the President and on the Senate is going to be up to us this year.”

Buttigieg, later in the event, said he didn’t know “where to begin” on Trump’s comments about faith.

He added that they were “especially” concerning coming from “a President who tries to cloak himself in religion and tell believers that they somehow have to vote for him, have to vote Republican.”

“I guess he just has a very different take on faith than I do,” Buttigieg said.

Watch the moment:

Buttigieg touts lead in Iowa, heralds Sanders' performance

Pete Buttigieg reacted to the news that the Iowa Democratic Party released the final results of the state’s caucuses on Thursday, telling CNN’s Chris Cuomo that his narrow lead over Bernie Sanders was “fantastic news.”

The former South Bend, Indiana, mayor leads the Vermont senator by one-tenth of one percentage point in the all-important state delegate equivalent count. The Democratic candidates have until 1pm ET/12 pm CT tomorrow to file a request for a recanvas or a recount.

The former mayor then spoke about how his campaign started with little resources or name recognition, adding, “To see how that led to that win for us in Iowa is fantastic. But I also know that we’re in New Hampshire now, now we’ve got to look ahead. New Hampshire is a state that has never been told what to do, right? And we’ve got to earn every vote and earn a win on Tuesday night right here.”

Buttigieg, pressed by Cuomo on whether he plans to call for a recanvass, said he would leave it to the state party, signaling that his campaign would likely not call for the votes to be counted again.

“Whatever they need to do in order to make sure that the information is clear and verified,” Buttigieg said.

“Would you request one?” Cuomo asked.

“I’ll leave it to the party to get into that,” he said. “But you know what I’ll say is nothing can take away what happened on Monday. Just an extraordinary moment for the movement that we have built and now we’re looking ahead to New Hampshire and beyond.”

Watch:

The town hall with Pete Buttigieg has started

Former South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg has taken the stage. CNN’s Chris Cuomo is moderating.

Sanders: My political journey has been 'incomprehensible'

Bernie Sanders, as a young man he said, would have never believed that he would be standing on this stage in Manchester tonight as a former mayor, Senator and two-time presidential candidate.

“If my parents were alive today, they both died young, it would have been incomprehensible to them – incomprehensible – that their son, coming from where we came from (would) become a US Senator or mayor, from Burlington, or candidate for President of the United States,” the 78-year-old Sanders said.

“It would have been unthinkable.”

Watch:

Sanders: ‘In many ways, Donald Trump is a socialist himself’ 

Bernie Sanders said he’d respond to attacks on him as a socialist in a general election match-up with President Donald Trump by calling Trump a socialist. 

“In many ways, Donald Trump is a socialist himself. He is a socialist who believes in massive help for large corporations and the rich,” Sanders said in a CNN town hall. 

He said as a real estate developer, Trump received “$800 million in tax breaks and subsidies to build luxury condominiums. That’s called socialism for the very, very rich.” 

“When we give tax breaks and subsidies to the fossil fuel industry to the tune of hundreds of billions of dollars so they can produce a product which is destroying the planet, this is called socialism for large corporations, corporate socialism,” Sanders said. 

Watch:

Sanders doesn't commit to naming woman or person of color as running mate

Bernie Sanders on Wednesday did not commit to choosing a woman or person of color as his running mate, but said his “inclination is to say yes” when asked if he would.

An undecided voter named Janine asked Sanders at the CNN town hall, “Will you name a running mate before the convention? And will it be a woman? Because why not? I’m not available, though.”

“I was just going to ask you, Janine. I figure that’s one way to get your vote,” Sanders joked. 

Sanders said if elected president, his administration and Cabinet would, “look more like America in terms of gender equality, in terms of racial equality than any administration in American history.” The senator said he is proud that his campaign is “enormously diverse.”

Pressed by CNN’s Anderson Cooper on whether he could commit to naming a woman or person of color as his running mate, Sanders said, “I don’t want to commit, but, you know, my inclination is to say yes.”

Watch:

Sanders: "Take to the bank" that I will support the Democratic nominee

Bernie Sanders responded to the concerns of a voter who said she saw the division between him and Hillary Clinton in 2016 by saying voters can “take to the bank” the fact he will help the Democratic nominee in 2020.

The New Hampshire voter said that she was in the room in Durham, New Hampshire, in 2016 when Sanders backed Clinton.

“It was a really exciting day, but there was division in the room, and I worried that day,” She said. “I worry now that this race will become more contentious as we head towards the convention.”

Sanders talked up his relationship with his 2020 competitors, especially the senators, and then said, “All of us understand what a threat Donald Trump is to our country and to the world, and I think I can speak for all of the candidates in saying that no matter who wins the nomination, needless to say, I hope it’s me, but no matter who wins the nomination, we’re all going to work together to defeat Donald Trump.”

Sanders added: “That I think you can take to the bank.”

Sanders’ role in the 2016 election has become more of a focus in recent months because Clinton has told multiple interviewers that she believes Sanders not ending his campaign for months hurt her.

Sanders and his team have pushed back by noting that he worked hard for Clinton once he endorsed her.

But concerns remain about how forcefully Sanders supporters will be if the Vermont senator loses the Democratic nomination.

Watch:

Sanders says he's 'tired of commenting on Trump's remarks'

Watch the moment:

Sanders ties his politics to his Jewish experience

Four years ago, Bernie Sanders rarely spoke about his Jewish faith and how it affected his politics.

That has changed in the 2020 campaign, so when he was asked about it tonight, he spoke at some length about its impact on his life.

“When I try to think about how I came to the views that I hold, there are two major factors,” Sanders said. “No. 1, I grew up in a family that didn’t have a whole lot of money. … The second one is being Jewish.”

He then recalled his youth in Brooklyn, New York, in a Jewish community that became home to many European Holocaust survivors.

“In the community that I lived in you go downtown, shop, and people had the tattoos from the concentration camps on their arms,” Sanders recalled.

After telling the story of his family’s return visit to its old hometown in Poland a few years ago, Sanders said those memories, and an understanding of what happened to the Jewish people who lived there, drives his opposition to the current administration.

“That,” he said, “is why I will do everything I can to end the kind of divisiveness that Trump is fomenting in this country.”

Watch:

Sanders: I’ll look at compromising with Republicans on health care "case by case"

Bernie Sanders said he – as president – would take the idea of compromising with Republicans on health care on a “case-by-case” basis, arguing that he could convince the American public to join him.

Sanders’ ability to move the American people is central to many of his policy pitches. And Sanders critics often raise questions about how the Vermont senator would actually pass the sweeping changes he proposes.

“Are there compromises you’re willing to make with Republicans to get close to what you want,” CNN’s Anderson Cooper asked Sanders.

“My job as president is to rally the people and tell their senators to support it. I think we can do that,” Sanders said.

Watch:

Sanders on health care: ‘I can’t do it alone’  

Bernie Sanders responded to former Joe Biden’s attacks on the political feasibility of his “Medicare for All” plan, saying his policy objectives require involving “millions of people in the political process.” 

“I admit, it is a different type of campaign, because I’m not here to tell you vote for me, I’m going to do all these great things. Ain’t gonna happen that way. Never happens that way,” Sanders said. 

Biden has sharpened his attacks on Sanders’ health care proposal in recent days as he campaigns in New Hampshire. 

“People need hope now,” the former vice president said Tuesday in Nashua. “So we want real progressive change in health care. Real change, not just talk. And I’m the only one in this race who’s ever gotten a big health care reform bill through the Congress. It’s called Obamacare.” 

Watch more:

Bernie Sanders: Enough of Iowa

Bernie Sanders is over Iowa.

After a protracted, incomplete count of the caucuses has left Sanders and Pete Buttigieg in a virtual tie for the lead, Sanders balked at the prospect of a recanvass of the vote in the state’s caucuses.

Sanders said the process “distressed” him and called it “sad” that the Iowa Democratic Party, as he put it, “screwed up the counting process quite so badly.”

The Vermont senator added that, in the end, he expected to share the lead in DNC delegates with Buttigieg.

Watch more: