Reuters AlertNet Full site
Homepage | Newsdesk | NGO Latest | Crisis briefings | Country profiles | MediaWatch | Jobs | Alerting | Login

NEWSDESK

Democrats take back seat to videos at debate
24 Jul 2007 01:09:57 GMT
Source: Reuters
By John Whitesides, Political Correspondent

CHARLESTON, S.C., July 23 (Reuters) - Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama and six other Democratic presidential contenders wrestled with questions of race, war and gender on Monday in a debate starring a parade of questions posed in YouTube videos.

The Democratic presidential debate was the first featuring questions submitted on video over the Internet from around the world, from workers in Darfur refugee camps to a talking snowman worried about global warming.

The format, designed to force candidates to drop their rehearsed answers and sound bites, was only occasionally successful but sparked exchanges on Iraq and an extended debate on race and gender involving Obama and Clinton.

Asked if Muslim leaders in the Middle East would be able to negotiate and work with a woman leader, Clinton said: "There isn't much doubt in anyone's mind that I can be taken seriously."

Obama, an Illinois senator who would be the first black president, said Americans were ready to go beyond racial divisions while Clinton said she was proud to be running as a woman.

"I couldn't run as anything other than a woman," the New York senator said. "I'm excited that I may be able finally to break that hardest of all glass ceilings."

The debate on the campus of the Citadel military college in Charleston, South Carolina, was the fourth Democratic debate of the 2008 campaign.

South Carolina, one of the first states to vote in the 2008 nominating contest, is scheduled to hold its Democratic primary along with Florida on Jan. 29, 2008, shortly after Iowa, Nevada and New Hampshire.

Told by one voter that most Americans expected Democrats to end the war after they took power in Congress in 2006, anti-war Ohio Rep. Dennis Kucinich said political games were the reason the war was continuing.

"Yes, it is politics. The Democrats have failed the American people," he said.

More than 2,000 video questions were posted on YouTube's Web site for the Democratic debate, and CNN editors chose about 25 of them to submit to the candidates.

The debate was the first of six sanctioned by the Democratic National Committee in an attempt to limit the explosion of debates and forums taking up candidates' time.


AlertNet news is provided by

Email this article       Send comments

Topics

•  Technology

•  Refugees & displacement

MORE >>

Emergencies

•  Sudan conflicts

•  Darfur conflict

MORE >>

Countries

Small country map
© 2004 Europa Technologies Ltd.
Reset map

•  Afghanistan profile
· View map

•  Iraq profile
· View map

MORE >>

NGO latest

•  ADRA's Response to 2007 Storms: Rapid, Global
ADRA - International

•  Somalia - Situation worsens in Afgooye following the arrival of newly displaced families from Mogadishu
MSF International

•  CWS Appeal: 2007 summer flooding
CWS

•  News - Generous response to Darfur crisis
Red Cross - UK

•  CWS situation report: Kansas flooding
CWS

MORE >>

Latest news

•  Democrats take back seat to videos at debate

•  Fleeing Haitian rebel leader denies drug charges

•  U.S. researchers unveil computerized prosthesis

•  Top Guatemala drug trafficker freed by 30 armed men

•  Peace activist Sheehan arrested at U.S. Congress

MORE >>

Disclaimers |  Copyright |  Privacy |  Contact Us |  Feedback |  About Us |  RSS XML

Last updated:Tue Jul 24 01:11:10 2007