Over the next two days, 20 Democrats will take the stage for the first debates of the 2020 presidential race. We look at the competing visions for America they’ll be fighting over this week, and throughout the campaign. Guest: Alexander Burns, who covers national politics for The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily.
Background reading:
Does anyone deserve to have a billion dollars? How many hours of sleep do you get? The Times asked 21 Democratic presidential candidates the same set of questions. Here’s what they said, and here are some takeaways.For the candidates, these early debates may represent the first, best — and, in some cases, only — opportunity to stand out from competitors and build national momentum in the primary. Here’s how they’re preparing.Senator Elizabeth Warren is the only candidate on the first night who is polling in double digits, but there are plenty of story lines and political dynamics to watch for.The Sunday Read: ‘The Inheritance Case That Could Unravel an Art Dynasty’
The Republican Attempt to Impeach President Biden
An Armored Train and a Dangerous New Alliance
A New Covid Shot for a New Covid Era
A Breaking Point for the U.S. Auto Industry
U.S. v. Google
The Sunday Read: ‘Wikipedia’s Moment of Truth’
A Tragic Fire and Broken Promises in South Africa
Why One Drug Company Held Back a Better Drug
How 100,000 Migrants Became a Political Crisis in New York
Passenger Planes Nearly Collide Far More Than You Know
Arizona’s Pipe Dream
A Major Overhaul of Prescription Drug Prices
A Breakout Moment for Vivek Ramaswamy
A Marriage, a Secret and a Crackdown in China
A New Race to the Moon
The Sunday Read: ‘The Fight for the Right to Trespass’
A Plane Crash, 10 Dead People and a Question: Was This Putin’s Revenge?
A Fiery First Republican Debate — Without Trump
Ready or Not, Driverless Cars Are Here
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Up First
Post Reports
The Ezra Klein Show
Consider This from NPR
Marketplace