Sanders most searched, most tweeted about candidate during Democratic debate

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Sen. Bernie Sanders Bernie SandersWinners and losers from the South Carolina debate Five takeaways from the Democratic debate Sanders most searched, most tweeted about candidate during Democratic debate MORE (I-Vt.) was the most searched and tweeted about candidate during the Democratic primary debate in Charleston, S.C., Tuesday night.

Data circulated by Google showed that the Vermont lawmaker was the most searched candidate on its platform during the two-hour debate, while Twitter said Sanders was the most tweeted about, followed by former Vice President Joe Biden Joe BidenWinners and losers from the South Carolina debate Five takeaways from the Democratic debate Sanders most searched, most tweeted about candidate during Democratic debate MORE and former New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg.

Sanders also had the most speaking time during the debate, according to multiple tallies.

Sanders has enjoyed a surge in momentum since his resounding victory in Nevada’s caucuses last Saturday, cementing his status as the primary field’s front-runner. However, his new position brought a litany of attacks against him on stage as his rivals sought to boost their own standing.

“Putin thinks Trump should be president of the United States and that’s why Russia is helping you get elected so you’ll lose to him,” Bloomberg said, referring to reports that surfaced this week saying that Russia is planning to meddle in the 2020 race to boost Sanders.

“The way I see it, Bernie is winning right now because the Democratic Party is a progressive party and progressive ideas are popular ideas,” added Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.). “Bernie and I agree on a lot of things, but I think I’d be a better president than Bernie.”

The melee also touched on Sanders’s record on gun control and whether voters would accept his progressivism in the attacks that descended on the Vermont senator.

Sanders is hoping to keep his post-Nevada momentum going heading into South Carolina, where polls show him narrowing Biden’s lead, and Super Tuesday, when 14 states and American Samoa will cast their votes, allocating about one-third of the total pledged delegates up for grabs.

SlippidySlappity on February 26th, 2020 at 04:49 UTC »

I work at a library and I was glad to see Bernie's book Our Revolution on the holds list this morning.

Turkin4tor on February 26th, 2020 at 04:27 UTC »

Good, I hope it's fueled by curiosity after all those blatant anti-Medicare4All ads

Palawinkip on February 26th, 2020 at 04:10 UTC »

Following USA politics from the outside, can anyone explain to me which one of Sanders' policies are actually radical?

I haven't seen or heard anything from him which is actually that far left wing ... from what I can tell his policies are all ones which are already working fine in many other countries.