Twitter Has Thoughts About All the Booing at the Democratic Debate

Not once, not twice, not thrice or four times even but throughout Tuesday night’s Democratic primary debate in South Carolina, booing broke out in the audience against one candidate or another.

The unusual interruption — where decorum has dictated most debate audiences clap, cheer or laugh only occasionally — was noticed on social media.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren was booed while criticizing former New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg and Sen. Bernie Sanders was booed while praising a literacy program started under Cuban revolutionary Fidel Castro. Later, former South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg was also booed.

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Some pointed to the fact that the debate attendees included people who had to spend a lot of money to pay for the tickets and so may have been predisposed to a candidate such as Bloomberg, a billionaire. Others said the booing was a stratagem, perhaps by Bloomberg who could have paid the booers and whose own debate performance last week was widely panned.

Much of the social media chatter was speculative and more than a little annoyed, depending on who was tweeting. Some users found humor in it, however.

Sex and the City star Cynthia Nixon, a former New York gubernatorial candidate, expressed her displeasure at Bloomberg, whom she labeled “insidious.”

Mike Bloomberg (left) and Pete Buttigieg at Tuesday's Democratic primary debate in South Carolina
Mike Bloomberg (left) and Pete Buttigieg at Tuesday's Democratic primary debate in South Carolina
From left: Sen. Elizabeth Warren, Sen. Bernie Sanders and former Vice President Joe Biden | Win McNamee/Getty Images
From left: Sen. Elizabeth Warren, Sen. Bernie Sanders and former Vice President Joe Biden | Win McNamee/Getty Images

 

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Throughout the night, the seven candidates — former Vice President Joe Biden, Buttigieg, Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar, Sanders, billionaire investor Tom Steyer and Warren — sounded off on issues including national security, health care, Israel, North Korea, Russian interference in American politics and the threat of the coronavirus.

At times their disagreements, otherwise familiar to Democratic voters after many debates this election, played out factitious fashion. The moderators did not always keep a tight rein on the proceedings.

With another contest only days away, followed by “Super Tuesday” next week, in which more than a dozen states will vote simultaneously, the candidates took the night to make one of their last (and they hoped best) cases to primary voters.