Fact-Checking the Biden-Sanders Democratic Debate – The New York Times, Nytimes.com
1.9k Views
Our reporters are following all of the exchanges and fact-checking the two candidates, providing context and explanation.
Credit … Erin Schaff / The New York Times
March , Updated : pm ET
The two major candidates continue to vie for the Democratic presidential nomination met Sunday night amid the coronavirus crisis at the CNN studio in Washington, without an audience, for what may be the final debate of the primary season .
Here is how the candidates’ remarks stacked up against the truth.
What the Facts Are: Senator Bernie Sanders said former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. had supported cuts to Social Security. What Sanders said:“You were in the Senate for a few years. Time and time again, talking about the necessity with pride about cutting Social Security, cutting Medicare and veterans programs. ”True but lacks context. Mr. Biden at multiple points in his Senate career praised measures to reduce the federal budget deficit, including some that would have reduced the spending growth in Social Security. He has also vowed to protect the program at other times, including in the Senate, in a 2019 vice-presidential debate and in his current campaign, where he has proposed expanding the program.
In , Mr. Biden supported a one-year freeze to cost-of-living adjustments in federal spending that would have applied to Social Security. In he voted for a federal balanced budget amendment that did not explicitly shield the program from cuts. He said in 2016 that he was open to raising the eligibility age for receiving benefits from the program, and he and President Barack Obama tried to negotiate a so-called grand bargain on federal spending that would have reduced the growth of social security spending over time.
What the facts are: Biden criticized President Trump for his decision to develop a new coronavirus test when one was already available.
What Mr. biden Said: “No, the World Health Organization offered testing kits that they have available to give to us now. We refused them. We did not want to buy them. We did not want to get them from them. We wanted to make sure we had our own. ”
. Sanders’s Medicare-for-all proposal . In truth, both policies would face long odds in Congress, where Republicans currently hold a majority in the Senate and oppose both ideas. Even if Democrats were to control both houses, the public option would still be far from easy to enact into law: Many wanted to include it in the Affordable Care Act passed under President Barack Obama, but it ultimately fell out of the legislation after intense lobbying from the health insurance industry.
What Biden said:“Also part of that was bailing out the automobile industry. Saving thousands of jobs. Tens of thousands of jobs over time. He voted against that as well. ”
This is misleading. Mr. Sanders actually supported the $ billion auto rescue plan in December . “The problem is if you don’t act in the midst of a growing recession, what does it mean to create a situation where millions of more people become unemployed and that could spread? And I have serious concerns about that. I think it would be a terrible idea to add millions more to the unemployment rolls, ”Mr. Sanders told (Vermont Public Radio) (at the time.
But the bill failed in the Senate, prompting the Bush administration to propose using funding from the (Troubled Asset Relief Program) – which passed in October to bail out Wall Street and which Mr. Sanders opposed – to also aid automakers. Once the bailouts were lumped together, Mr. Sanders the overall package . Fact checks by Sarah Kliff, Linda Qiu, Jim Tankersley, David E. Sanger and Lisa Friedman.
GIPHY App Key not set. Please check settings