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Abstract:The second primary debates will highlight where 2020 Democratic candidates stand on healthcare, criminal justice reform, climate change and more.
At the second primary debates of the 2020 presidential race on Tuesday and Wednesday evenings, 20 Democratic candidates will be making their case for voters to send them to the White House.
Issues such as health care and climate change are energizing the Democratic electorate.
The Democratic primary is full of policy plans that could fundamentally change American life. Here are eight issues that the 2020 candidates mostly agree on and where divides emerge.
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At the second Democratic primary debates of the 2020 presidential race on Tuesday and Wednesday evenings, 20 candidates will be making their case for voters to send them to the White House. For many of them, it represents their last opportunity to break out of a crowded primary field before the September debates, which have much stricter qualifications to make it on stage.
Issues like health care and climate change are energizing the Democratic electorate, but not every candidate shares the same approach to policy-making.
Some candidates, like Sens. Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren, are running as crusaders for the middle and working classes who will tackle inequality with bold action. Others, like former Vice President Joe Biden, are promising to restore a sense of normalcy and bipartisanship in Washington before its politics was upended by President Donald Trump. Most fall somewhere in between and are maneuvering for support from the progressive and centrist wings of the party.
Here are eight issues that the 2020 candidates mostly agree upon, and where the dividing lines emerge.
Read more: Here's who will be on stage each night for this week's Democratic debates hosted by CNN, what time they'll start, and how to watch
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