Adam Schiff And Steve Garvey Clash Over Donald Trump In Latest U.S. Senate Debate; Moderators Seek Specifics On Crime, Housing And The Border

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The four leading candidates for California‘s open U.S. Senate seat met again this evening, this time in a one-hour San Francisco debate that produced fewer clashes than their first gathering last month.

Still, with less than a month before the state’s open primary, Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA) focused a number of his attacks on Steve Garvey, the sole Republican on the stage, particularly over the “issue” of Donald Trump.

“Let me just say this also to Mr. Garvey: The greatest threat that we have to our democracy is Donald Trump,” Schiff said.

Garvey voted for Trump in the last two presidential elections but said that, when it comes to supporting him this year, he “will make that decision when the time comes.” He replied to Schiff by saying that the “gravest threat to democracy is deconstruction of the Constitution. Packing the court. Doing away with the filibuster. These are things that deconstruct democracy.”

The Schiff replied, “Then Donald Trump packed the Supreme Court, which is why millions of Americans lost their right of reproductive freedom, why the Supreme Court is striking down air quality and water quality regulations.” As he started to talk about striking down voting rights, Garvey started to interject.

“You are fixated on one person and one person only,” Garvey said.

Schiff has been leading in polls in the race, with a battle between Garvey and Rep. Katie Porter (D-CA) to secure the other spot on the ballot in the general election.

Porter has called Schiff “cynical” for spotlighting Garvey in his ads, on the premise that the former Dodger star would, as a Republican, be much easier to beat than she would. In other words, by highlighting Garvey’s past support of Trump, Schiff is also helping the Republican consolidate support among the state’s rightward voters.

During the debate, Porter took another swipe at Schiff during a question of whether there should be upper age limits for members of Congress. “As Mr. Schiff well knows, it is true that we have gerrymandering and elections that are deeply blue districts in which there really aren’t competitive elections. In fact, he’s hoping that the Senate race turns into one with the ads that he is running right now,” she said.

Assisted by a loud bell ring, moderators Frank Buckley of KTLA and Nikki Laurenzo of Inside California Politics kept candidates to their time limits and tried to pin them down on specific questions. When the candidates tried to answer in their talking points, they followed up with questions again.

Sometimes it worked, sometimes it did not.

Schiff was asked whether President Joe Biden was “wrong” to say last week that Israel’s actions had been “over the top” in its response to the Hamas terrorist attack. After expressing support for the way that the president has handled the Israel-Hamas war, Schiff was asked again and said, “I don’t know that I express it the way the president has. But I think he is right to try to bring about this negotiated deal, where we’ll have an extended pause, so we can get the hostages out and more aid in.”

Garvey has attacked regulation as a cause of California’s housing crisis, but he spoke in generalities when pressed on what specific policies he would do away with. Asked again, he said, “We see the cost of housing continue to rise for one simple reason. Let’s take young adults. Young adults cannot afford to have the single most important equity in their lives … So I go back constantly to the idea of opening the gates, cutting down inflation.”

Other moments:

At the last debate, Rep. Barbara Lee (D-CA) clashed with Garvey and she called him out for chiding the candidates on the issue of homelessness, when she herself had once been unsheltered. At this gathering, Garvey told her, “I’m so sorry that you went through that.”

When asked how she has produced results in Congress on addressing the homelessness crisis, Lee cited the expansion of the Homelessness Agency Task Force and other proposed legislation. She also was asked about her call for a $50 per hour minimum wage and how it would impact small businesses. Noting that she owned and ran a business, she said, “I know what worker productivity means — that means that you have to make sure your employees are taken care of and have a living wage.”

Schiff said that “there’s no question that we have a crime problem in California, particularly with these smash and grab robberies,” while pointing out that when Garvey “was playing baseball,” he was working as a prosecutor in the U.S. attorneys office.

On the border, Garvey said that Biden “opened the floodgates and created a crisis in the United States. He should be the one to step up and close the border.”

Porter was asked about why, after five years in Congress, she waiting until last week to introduce a 10-point plan to solve the crisis. She noted her work as a consumer advocate, but was then pressed again for an answer. “I have worked on housing issues since the day I was elected and have talked a lot about this, about the challenges that my own family faces,” she said.

At a number of points, Porter attacked “Washington insiders” who ensured tax breaks for billionaires. “The problem is that the workers who are creating the value who are hard at work are not receiving enough to live on while Washington insiders continue to give huge tax breaks to the wealthy.”

Later in the debate, Schiff said, “You can’t walk down the halls of Congress without tripping over five people that are going to say they are going to shake up Washington. They don’t end up getting anything actually accomplished.”

More to come.

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