From left: Sen. Kamala Harris speaks during a Democratic presidential debate

The symbiotic nature of debates and public opinion polls was on full display Tuesday night during the Democratic presidential debate in Ohio, said Krista Jenkins, a political science professor at Farleigh Dickinson University and the schoolโ€™s poll director.

โ€œ[Former Vice President Joe] Biden stood for incrementalism, and those who flanked him โ€” Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders โ€” pushed hard for a vision thatโ€™s anything but incremental,โ€ Jenkins said in recapping the night for Advance Local Media in New Jersey.

Nowhere was this more evident in the debate over health care, Jenkins noted.

As for winners and losers, Jenkins said there are no such things as winners and losers, as there are too many dimensions to a debate performance that the public evaluates to boil it down to such simplistic terms.

However, several Democratic strategists noted that New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker turned in a strong showing, but California Sen. Kamala Harris struggled to find her moment.

BuzzFeedโ€™s Darren Sands described Booker as a โ€œself-appointed uniter.โ€

Booker drew a contrast with his opponents and President Trump, saying he was โ€œhaving deja vu all over againโ€ after early questions in the debate about Trumpโ€™s attacks on Joe Biden and his son Hunterโ€™s work in Ukraine.

โ€œI saw this play in 2016โ€™s election,โ€ Booker said during the debate. โ€œWe are literally using Donald Trumpโ€™s lies. And the second issue we cover on this stage is elevating a lie and attacking a statesman. That was so offensive.

โ€œWe should not have to defend ourselves,โ€ he said. โ€œAnd the only person sitting at home that was enjoying that was Donald Trump seeing that weโ€™re distracting from his malfeasance and selling out of his office.โ€

Sands noted that Booker used his time to walk through his own priorities, from addressing childhood poverty to gun licensing.

Bookerโ€™s campaign manager, Addisu Demissie, said in a statement Tuesday night that Booker โ€œwon the night by standing out as a leader, a unifier, and the adult in the roomโ€ who had โ€œrefocused the conversation on the issues that matter most.โ€

Demissie said Booker was a โ€œbreath of fresh airโ€ on the stage, โ€œparticularly by coming to Vice President Bidenโ€™s defense against Trumpโ€™s lies and highlighting issues that arenโ€™t getting enough attention in this presidential campaign, like womenโ€™s reproductive health care, strengthening unions, and ending child poverty.โ€

โ€œFor yet another debate, Cory showed a national audience that he can unite our country and make real change for Americans who face injustice and seek opportunity,โ€ Demissie said.

An analysis by USA Todayโ€™s Aamer Madhani noted that with 12 candidates vying for votersโ€™ attention at the debate, โ€œthe White House contenders threw sharper jabs at each other and competed to outdo each other in their expressions of outrage over President Donald Trump.โ€

Sanders returned to the debate stage two weeks after suffering a heart attack and resumed his call for a โ€œpolitical revolution.โ€ Billionaire activist Tom Steyer made his stage debut, but struggled to get much speaking time.

CNN counted Andrew Yang and Pete Buttigieg among winners.

The network noted that Buttigieg, the South Bend mayor, had one clear goal in the debate: hit Elizabeth Warren on her support for โ€œMedicare for Allโ€ and make sure Democratic voters knew he had an alternate plan that would not eliminate the private health insurance market.

โ€œMission accomplished,โ€ the analysts said.

On Yang, a CNN analyst said, โ€œIf I told you even three months ago that there would be a time in mid-October in which there was an extended conversation in a Democratic debate about the dangers of automation, you would have laughed at me.โ€

CNBC pointed out that the presidentโ€™s Twitter account often sets the dayโ€™s political agenda.

On Tuesday, the networkโ€™s analysts highlighted the fact that it formed the basis of a head-to-head between Warren and Harris.

โ€œI just wanted to say that I was surprised to hear that you did not agree with me that on this subject of what should be the rules around corporate responsibility for these Big Tech companies, when I called on Twitter to suspend Donald Trumpโ€™s account, that you did not agree,โ€ Harris said. โ€œI would urge you to join me.โ€

But Warren did not seem interested in discussing the matter.

โ€œLook, I donโ€™t just want to push Donald Trump off Twitter. I want to push him out of the White House. Thatโ€™s our job,โ€ Warren said.

โ€œSo join me. Join me in saying that his Twitter account should be shut down,โ€ Harris responded.

To that, Warren responded: โ€œNo.โ€

โ€œNo?โ€ Harris asked.

Warren then pivoted to โ€œwhy it is that we have had laws on the books for antitrust for over a century and yet for decades now weโ€™ve all called out how the big drug companies are calling the shots in Washington?โ€

Stacy M. Brown is a senior writer for The Washington Informer and the senior national correspondent for the Black Press of America. Stacy has more than 25 years of journalism experience and has authored...

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