- The fifth 2020 Democratic debate took place in Atlanta, Georgia, on Wednesday night after a lengthy day of impeachment hearings.
- Early on in the debate, Sen. Kamala Harris issued the first heated attack of the night, excoriating Rep. Tulsi Gabbard over her frequent Fox News appearances and criticism of the Democratic party.
- Harris also went after Gabbard over her controversial record regarding Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
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During the fifth 2020 Democratic presidential debate on Wednesday night, Sen. Kamala Harris of California ripped into Rep. Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii over her frequent Fox News appearances and criticism of the Democratic Party.
The heated exchange began after Gabbard was asked about her recent criticism of former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who during an October interview suggested the Hawaii lawmaker was being groomed by the GOP to be a third-party candidate. Clinton also referred to Gabbard as a "favorite of the Russians."
In her first question of the night, Gabbard was asked to explain why she believes Clinton is the "rot" of the Democratic party.
Gabbard said the party "continues to be influenced by the foreign policy establishment represented by Hillary Clinton and others."
The Hawaii lawmaker said she was running to end the "Bush-Clinton-Trump foreign policy doctrine of regime-change wars."
Gabbard also said: "Our Democratic Party, unfortunately, is not the party that is of, by and for the people." That particularly remark was tweeted out alongside a 100 emoji by the official Trump War Room Twitter account linked to the president's reelection campaign.
Harris was asked to respond to Gabbard's remarks and she did not hold back.
'It's unfortunate that we have someone on this stage … who during the Obama administration spent four years on Fox News criticizing President Obama," Harris said. "What we need on this stage, in November, is someone who has the ability to win."
—MSNBC (@MSNBC) November 21, 2019
Harris also went after Gabbard over her controversial record regarding Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, and her refusal to explicitly refer to him as a war criminal.
The California senator said Gabbard "fails to call a war criminal by what he is — a war criminal."
In response, Gabbard said: "What Senator Harris is doing is unfortunately continuing to traffic in lies and smears and innuendos because she cannot challenge the substance of the argument that I am making."
This is not the first time Gabbard and Harris have sparred during a presidential debate. During the debate in Detroit over the summer, Gabbard went after Harris's record as a prosecutor, zeroing in on the issue of marijuana legalization.
Gabbard has become a regular on Fox News, often appearing on Tucker Carlson Tonight, and has garnered support from pro-Trump, right-wing internet celebrities — particularly after her recent spat with Clinton.
The former secretary of state's comments on Gabbard have raised her profile, but that has not translated into an increase in support for the Hawaii lawmaker among likely Democratic voters, according to a new Insider poll released on Wednesday.
- Read more:
- Tulsi Gabbard won't call Syria's Assad a war criminal as she dances around Stephen Colbert's tough questioning
- Tulsi Gabbard's foreign policy frustrates centrist Democrats, draws cheers from anti-interventionists, and makes her political identity tough to pigeonhole
- Meghan McCain calls Tulsi Gabbard an 'Assad apologist' in heated exchange on Syria