- Who was on stage: Joe Biden, Michael Bloomberg, Pete Buttigieg, Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Amy Klobuchar, and Tom Steyer.
The 10th Democratic debate — this one in Charleston, South Carolina — is in the books.
It was an incredibly contentious affair, with candidates shouting at (and over) one another as they scrambled to draw contrasts with each other in advance of the critical South Carolina primary on Saturday.
Here's who had the best and worst night:
Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar described tonight's Democratic debate in South Carolina as "another slug fest."
"If we’re going to spend the next four months tearing the party apart, then we’ll be able to watch Donald Trump spend the next four years tearing the country apart," she told CNN's Dana Bash and Erin Burnett following the debate.
“In the last three years, last three years, billionaires in this country saw an $850 billion increase in their wealth,” Sanders said.
Sanders was relying on a figure from the Institute for Policy Studies, according to the think tank senior scholar Chuck Collins but the number was inflated. “We informed Senator Sanders that US billionaires increased their wealth since Trump’s election by $850 billion. Our updated number is $710 billion, an increase of 30 percent,” Collins told CNN during the debate.
“Senator Sanders was accurately using information that we provided, so we at Institute for Policy Studies are responsible for the error,” Collins added.
He said that in 2016, there were 541 US billionaires with wealth totaling about $2.4 trillion. In 2019, he said, there were 607 US billionaires with wealth totaling about $3.1 trillion.
Collins said he informed the Sanders campaign on Tuesday morning that there had been an error, after CNN contacted the campaign to ask for the source for the $850 billion number. It is not clear, though, whether Sanders himself was informed of the error prior to the debate.
There is no doubt that the wealthiest Americans have gotten wealthier under President Trump, though others have also gained.
Sen. Amy Klobuchar claimed during tonight's Democratic debate that a Vanderbilt University study ranked her as the most effective Democrat in the Senate and that two of her competitors for the Democratic nomination, Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders, ranked among the bottom half of the list.
Klobuchar said during the debate in South Carolina that “according to Vanderbilt University in Tennessee, last Congress, I was the most effective Democrat in the US Senate on 15 metrics. Bernie and Elizabeth were in the bottom half. It matters — it matters if you can actually get things done."
What Vanderbilt calls the “Legislative Effectiveness Score” is “based on 15 metrics that take into account the number of bills a legislator sponsors, how far each of those bills advances through the legislative process from introduction to (possibly) becoming law and its relative substantive significance.” The average Legislative Effectiveness Score is 1.0.
Klobuchar has a score of 2.815, ranking first among the 48 Democrats in the Senate during that time. And Warren has a score of .548 and ranks 32nd out of 48 Democrats in the Senate.
Sanders caucuses with Democrats, but since he is elected as an independent in Congress, he was not ranked among those within the party as Klobuchar suggested. Sanders has a score of .159.
Former Democratic presidential candidate Andrew Yang said Bernie Sanders is "like a fortress" under questioning on stage.
"I have been there. He has a force field. Everything you say it's like, 'Let me be clear. I'm going to talk about what I'm going to talk about. It's not really going to be what you ask me about,'" he said on CNN following the debate.
Yang added that Sanders will then "go into a Bernieism" rather than addressing the question.
Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders defended his sweeping plan to overhaul America’s health insurance system, saying “Medicare for All” will reduce the nation’s health care price tag.
“What every study out there, conservative or progressive says, 'Medicare For All' will save money,” said Sanders, who came under fire for the cost of his proposal, which has been pegged at more than $30 trillion over a decade.
That's because more people would be insured, more benefits would be covered and more medical services would be used since there'd be no cost for care.
"You will in total spend more as a nation on health care from adding all the bells and whistles that are associated with these kinds of proposals," Linda Blumberg, an institute fellow, said when the study was published last October.
President Donald Trump took to Twitter to respond to the presidential candidates at tonight’s Democratic debate after they were critical of his response to the novel coronavirus.
“CDC and my Administration are doing a GREAT job of handling Coronavirus, including the very early closing of our borders to certain areas of the world. It was opposed by the Dems, ‘too soon’, but turned out to be the correct decision,” Trump tweeted. “No matter how well we do, however, the (…) Democrats talking point is that we are doing badly. If the virus disappeared tomorrow, they would say we did a really poor, and even incompetent, job. Not fair, but it is what it is. So far, by the way, we have not had one death. Let’s keep it that way!”
Former Vice President Joe Biden talked about his experience dealing with the Ebola outbreak during his time in the Obama administration and went after Trump, saying Trump wiped out federal budgets for the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Sen. Bernie Sanders also went after the President for his comments that the coronavirus will stop spreading once the weather gets warmer.
"In the White House today, we have a self-described great genius — self-described — and this great genius has told us that this coronavirus is going to end in two months. April is the magical date that this great scientist we have in the White House has determined — I wish I was kidding, that is what he said,” Sanders said.
Former Vice President Joe Biden said Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders encouraged a primary challenge to President Barack Obama in 2012.
“He said we should primary Barack Obama,” Biden said. “Someone should.”
“I think one of the reasons that President Obama has moved as far to the right as he has is he thinks he can go all the way and no one will stand up to him,” Sanders added.
“I'm not a Democrat,” he said. “I'm the longest-serving independent. I think if a progressive Democrat wants to run, I think it would enliven the debate, raise some issues and people have a right to do that.”
Sanders went on to endorse Obama in 2012.
The seven candidates gave a closing statement to wrap up tonight's debate, the last one before Saturday's primary in South Carolina and Super Tuesday.
Asked to describe the biggest misconception about them and their mottos, here's how they responded: