![Friday Open Thread [2.12.16]](https://delawareliberal.net/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/12-debate-2.w560.h375.jpg)
For the first time since the Democrats began debating in the fall, through six debates, we have a clear winner and a clear loser. Until now, both candidates usually did well enough where pundits and supporters could say "both Hillary and Bernie won." Not last night.
Hillary clearly dominated the debate and scored a knockout punch with her closing argument that, as you will read below from others smarter than me, finally established her argument against Sanders, and it is a good one. She dominated on substantive points and on speaking style: calm, cool, collected. Last night she most reminded me of the man she hopes to replace. It was her best debate performance this cycle, if not ever.
Bernie, on the other hand, had his worst. I wonder if he is ill, and he could be, since it is winter, it's cold season, and he was coughing throughout the debate. He also seemed off, cranky and mean. Usually Bernie's endearing schtick, of that angry uncle or grandpa, normally comes off well. You liked his rants. Last night, the schtick was not endearing, and you heard audible groans from the audience with his mean and condescending comment "You're not in the White House yet." It played exactly how Barack Obama's "You're likeable enough, Hillary" played. An unnecessary and mean poke that has kinda shattered his charm a little bit. Hopefully it was just an off night for him, and not a sign of things to come.
Substantively, the debate revealed two new weaknesses for Bernie Sanders. First, he has a Rubio problem. Constant repetition of your stump speech and one central theme became obvious rather quickly, and it did not play well. Second, when wasn't imitating Rubio, he digressed into this guy who was regurgitating 70 years of liberal and leftist foreign policy grievances, like that old crazy hippy that always shows up to every town hall meeting to talk about Cambodia. Look, I get it, Kissinger is a bad guy and Hillary should have just said "All he did was commend my running of the State Department, that's all I said at the last debate," and Bernie should have just left it at "Well, I wouldn't be listening to Henry Kissinger for any advice whatsoever," and the point would have been made. Instead, Bernie turned what was a mistake by Clinton into a massive mistake by Bernie. His young fans probably had to quickly google names like Mossadegh and United Fruit to figure out what he was talking about.