JUDY WOODRUFF: Thank you, Amna.
And so, after last night's drama-filled debate
in Las Vegas, where does this unpredictable
race for the Democratic nomination stand?
Michael Meehan was a longtime aide for congressional
Democrats and on Democratic campaigns, including
then Senator John Kerry's 2004 presidential
bid. Ian Sams most recently served during
this current election cycle as the campaign
press secretary for Senator Kamala Harris.
And Matthew Dowd, he was the chief strategist
on President George W. Bush's reelection campaign
in 2004. He is now a political analyst for
ABC News.
And we welcome all of you to the "NewsHour."
Thank you for being here.
Let's start out with considering this debate.
Now that we have had a day to let it sink
in, how does it change the shape of this contest?
Ian Sams?
IAN SAMS, Former National Press Secretary,
Kamala Harris Campaign: I think that, first
of all, the biggest answer -- the biggest
question that was outstanding was, how many
people watched it? And we saw that it was
upwards of 20 million Americans. That's a
lot of people.
So, there's no doubt that the debate will
have some sort of lasting impact on this race.
Now, we are really close to voting, which
I think is why you saw so many candidates
willing to go after one another last night
and really draw a stark contrast between each
other, because the pressure is on.
You have to make moves right now if you want
to win, especially with Bernie Sanders having
a pretty commanding position atop of the field.
And so I think what we saw last night was
Mayor Bloomberg probably got brought down
a peg by especially Elizabeth Warren's pretty
searing attacks on his history and record.
But whether or not all the benefit goes to
her, I think, is still up in the air.
JUDY WOODRUFF: Michael Meehan, what changes,
if anything, as a result of last night, do
you think?
MICHAEL MEEHAN, Democratic Consultant: Well,
I think Michael Bloomberg getting on a stage
was sort of the big news.
And I think the fact Iowa and New Hampshire
didn't actually do the winnowing process in
the way that they typically have done over
the last 50 years, and so the pressure is
high. People are voting in Nevada right now.
And then you have South Carolina.
But I think Bloomberg is looking for a do-over,
for sure. He showed his rust. He totally has
another chance. The good news for him, the
calendar work for him. He gets back on the
debate stage next Tuesday. He doesn't have
to simmer for weeks and weeks before he has
a chance to do better than he's done.
JUDY WOODRUFF: Matthew Dowd, how do you see
the results of last night on this race?
MATTHEW DOWD, Former George W. Bush Campaign
Strategist: Well, to me, it was the most significant
debate we have had thus far because of the
timing that we're at and the number of viewers.
If you think about this, the total number
of people that are going to vote in the Democratic
primaries and caucuses is right at around
20 million people. And that's basically how
many watched that. So, to me, it's the most
crucial part of the debate.
I think you basically have one through five,
the candidates that basically finished one
through five in how well they did, the gap
between them is much smaller than the gap
between the number five candidate and the
number six candidate, which was Bloomberg.
I think his performance was bad for him. There's
levels of bad. His was the worst level of
bad in a debate for somebody that came from
the mayor of New York. And so I think he finally
came out from under the air cover of his TV
ads. And I think voters wanted to see what
he was like.
And so as -- I agree with the previous person
that said, we don't know where, if he falls
in the polls from where he's at today, where
that's going to go to. Will it go to Joe Biden?
I thought Elizabeth Warren's performance was
very well done. That may give her another
set of oxygen in this race to have her do
well in Nevada and South Carolina. So this
race is still full of many twists and turns.
JUDY WOODRUFF: Well, I was hoping that all
three of you were going to tell me exactly
where this thing stood right now, but it sounds
like still very much in flux.
My question, Ian, is how much in flux is it?
Bernie Sanders is leading in a number of polls,
as you all have suggested, but you do have
this bunching of other candidates and this
big question mark, Mike Bloomberg and all
of his money.
So, some people are already asking, does Bernie
Sanders -- could he possibly be so far ahead
at this point, it's hard to catch up with
him?
IAN SAMS: Well, the lead-in package, I think,
before we started having this conversation
really hit the nail on the head when they
showed Vice President Biden's comment, which
was mirrored by every other candidate on stage
last night, besides Bernie Sanders, that they
may be willing to go all the way to the convention,
as long as there are delegates coming into
their campaigns, and as long as their campaigns
have enough cash to stay afloat, and not fold,
which really changes the game in this.
Bernie at this point is probably on pace to
get somewhere between 30 and 35 to 40 percent
of the delegates, which is not a majority,
over the next little bit, if nothing changes.
And so Bernie is ahead right now.
But as long as these other candidates are
pocketing away some number of delegates, and
not getting blown out completely, we could
be in a situation where they're all willing
to go to the convention and try to fight it
out there.
JUDY WOODRUFF: So, Michael Meehan, are -- am
I hearing some of you say that literally any
one of these six candidates could make it
to the nomination?
MICHAEL MEEHAN: Oh, for sure, because, while
Bernie Sanders has a lead, the lead is one
delegate. I mean, the Buttigieg campaign would
say, we're tied with you in delegates as we
sit here this far out.
So I think that any one of the six, for various
reasons. Bloomberg didn't have a great performance,
but he doesn't lose money because he doesn't
need the money. Warren had a good night. She's
going to raise a bunch of money online today.
Sanders has a huge ability to continue to
fund himself all the way through to Milwaukee.
So those kinds of dynamics mean that the caucuses
-- there's more people who already voted in
this caucus than voted last time in 2016.
And we haven't even reached the date of the
caucus yet. So there is a high level of energy
and everybody is pretty bunched in between
25 and 15 percent. It's a small amount of
delegates that get determined by that number.
JUDY WOODRUFF: So, Matthew Dowd, wide open,
to an extent, and yet a lot of angst in the
-- among Democrats about Bernie Sanders and
the fact that he's shown the strength that
he has.
MATTHEW DOWD: Yes, it's fascinating to me.
There's angst for -- there's angst about Bernie
Sanders, but there's angst about Joe Biden,
and there's angst about Elizabeth Warren.
And there's angst about -- there's angst about
almost every candidate in this race.
I think what you have today is we have gone
from one weak front-runner, Joe Biden, to
no front-runner, to another weak front-runner
in this.
And I'm not a person that buys into this idea
-- the idea of electability, I think, is very
ethereal. It moves and shapes in the race.
I remember Bill Clinton in 1992 wasn't electable.
Barack Obama wasn't the most electable candidate
in 2008. And Donald Trump was certainly not
the most electable candidate in 2016.
All went on to win the presidency. So, I think
deciding today who's the most electable or
who's got the greatest vulnerabilities -- I
think everybody thought, wow, Michael Bloomberg
is going to be powerful. Then he shows up
at a debate and does awful. Then everybody's
questioning now that.
And so I think there are vulnerabilities that
Bernie Sanders has, because of his self-label,
his own labels on himself, but I don't think
we really know where this race is going to
go and who is the best candidate yet to beat
Donald Trump.
JUDY WOODRUFF: Well, you do hear a lot of
discussion, Ian Sams, about the so-called
divide among Democrats over -- the more liberal
Democrats are in the Bernie Sanders camp,
or they were in Elizabeth Warren, or maybe
they still are, and then the more moderate
Democrats.
I think -- I'm trying to understand, to what
extent is each side saying, I'm not going
to support your guy? If I'm a moderate, I'm
not going to support Bernie. And, vice versa,
if I'm a Bernie supporter, I'm not going to
support anybody else out there.
IAN SAMS: I don't think there's that high
level of division in the party.
I think that all the candidates specifically
are saying, well, we will support the nominee
no matter what. We have to. Donald Trump is
an existential threat to the country, and
we have to get him out of there.
I think, the longer this goes on, it just
depends on the tone and tenor of the race.
I think last night was sharp, but I don't
think that it was catastrophic. I think that
it was people pointing out differences with
each other and why certain opponents might
not make the best nominee.
But, right now, you do see, like, a lot more
unity among the party and among the candidates
than you do division. And I don't think that
that's going to go away. You think back to
2008 or 2004, which Matt and Michael were
both a part of that contest.
JUDY WOODRUFF: Right.
IAN SAMS: The primaries were tough and sharp,
and people hit each other, but came together
at the end of the day, and then, 2008, won
the election.
JUDY WOODRUFF: But, Michael Meehan, you did
hear Michael Bloomberg say last night, if
Bernie Sanders is the nominee, he's going
to lose Donald Trump. That was pretty definitive.
MICHAEL MEEHAN: Well, I think we all run the
last campaign over again, and Donald Trump
won by 77,000 votes in three states.
And so people make the premises of their campaigns
on their ability to talk to those Midwestern
states, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin.
You flip 80,000 votes, someone else is in
the White House.
And Donald Trump is running the same play
again. He hasn't changed his strategy a lick.
So the question is, who can turn those 80,000
people in those three states? And that's why
we're fighting over such a narrow sliver here.
JUDY WOODRUFF: And we're looking at the polls
from those three states and seeing some interesting
numbers right now.
But, Matthew Dowd, as somebody who has been
-- has been at the center of a campaign, in
the other party, but watching the Democrats
very closely, how do you see this party coming
together eventually, or do you see this as
something that could be really ugly right
up until the end?
MATTHEW DOWD: Well, I remember very well when
I was involved in 2000 for Bush, and -- when
Bush and McCain ran against each other. Talk
about a bitter race that happened. The party
came together because they had a -- they had
a principle that they wanted to get done,
which is to win the race.
I think one of the benefits the Democrats
have that they have not had in a long time
is, there is a unifying principle in the Democratic
Party today among all voters, every single
voter, which is Donald Trump. They do not
want Donald Trump to be president for another
four years.
So I think, by the time the conventions comes,
they're going to have to iron some things
out, they're going to have to work out what's
the best way to go in this, because I think
for sure we're going to go into the convention
where nobody has the total number of delegates
when they walk in, but I think Donald Trump
will help them unify the party.
JUDY WOODRUFF: Well, it's every reporter's
dream to get to a convention where the results
are a surprise.
MICHAEL MEEHAN: And every operative's nightmare.
(LAUGHTER)
JUDY WOODRUFF: And every operative's nightmares.
You're right.
But we will -- what a story we have, and so
important to pay close attention.
Ian Sams, Michael Meehan, Matthew Dowd, thank
you all.
MATTHEW DOWD: Thanks, Judy.
