It’s beginning to heat up. A diverse field of nearly two dozen Democrats are off and running for the right to challenge a Republican president mired in investigations, a trade war with China and an approval rating hovering in the mid-40’s.
With the first democratic debate set for next month, this should be a dramatic year in U.S. politics.
CGTN’s Nathan King has this report.
Follow Nathan King on Twitter@nathanking
To discuss:
- Joe Madison is a longtime civil rights activist and the host of a program on Sirius XM’s Urban View Channel.
- Julio Ricardo Varela is the digital media director at Futuro Media Group and the founder of LatinoRebels.com.
- Amy Holmes is a political commentator and columnist for the Swiss weekly “Die Weltwoche”.
- Frank Sesno is the director of George Washington University’s School of Media and Public Affairs.
For more:
Joe Biden told associates that he saw himself as the candidate best equipped to defeat President Trump. He's seen by many Democrats as capable of restoring the consensus-seeking liberalism of the Obama administration. https://t.co/U9tQ3UCnQn
— NYT Politics (@nytpolitics) April 25, 2019
The fact that there's so many Democrats running for president right now tells @tamarakeithNPR "there's no single candidate that is scaring everyone else out of the field," she tells @LisaDNews. pic.twitter.com/g7gisWs74r
— PBS NewsHour (@NewsHour) May 6, 2019