Hillary Clinton forced to keep swinging as Bernie Sanders digs in

Senator’s staying power means front-runner cannot pivot yet to general election voters

Democratic US presidential candidates Senator Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton pose before the start of the  Democratic US presidential candidates debate in  Florida on Wednesday. Photograph: REUTERS/Carlo Allegri
Democratic US presidential candidates Senator Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton pose before the start of the Democratic US presidential candidates debate in Florida on Wednesday. Photograph: REUTERS/Carlo Allegri

Hillary Clinton, rattled by her Democratic presidential rival Bernie Sanders's upset in Michigan and what it means for upcoming state contests in the midwest, tacked hard to the left on immigration at the party's debate in Miami on Wednesday.

The former first lady, senator and secretary of state was pressed by Jorge Ramos, anchor for Hispanic TV station Univision, whether she would continue Barack Obama's legacy as "deporter in chief" and remove undocumented children and their parents from the US.

“I would not deport children. I do not want to deport family members either, Jorge,” Clinton responded at the party’s eighth presidential debate, attempting to shore up her “firewall” among minority voters.

“I want to, as I said, prioritise who would be deported: violent criminals, people planning terrorist attacks, anybody who threatens us,” she said. “That’s a relatively small universe.”

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Clinton's policy on the "undocumented", one shared by Sanders, illustrated how far apart the Democratic race is from the Republican primary, where poll-topper Donald Trump and chief rival Ted Cruz say they plan to deport some 11 million illegal migrants.

Break from Obama

The sharp break from Obama’s harsh deportation policies (he has deported more than 2.5 million) showed that Clinton – still struggling, as her camp sees it, to swat away gadfly Sanders on the way to the nomination – cannot yet pivot to the centre to embrace general-election voters, given her inability to lock down northern industrial states.

Clinton appeared desperate in Wednesday night’s debate, seemingly frustrated at the staying power of Sanders, a self-professed democratic socialist and candidate she is still having to attack hard.

She accused the Vermont senator of supporting “Minuteman” vigilante patrols at the Mexican border to hunt down immigrants and objecting to the 2009 bailout of the auto industry – misleading claims that Sanders rubbished.

He accused Clinton of unfairly cherry-picking "pieces" of broader legislation that he supported in the Senate.

One of Clinton’s wilder claims was that Sanders had “sided with the Koch brothers” – the billionaire conservative benefactors so despised by liberals – in their mutual opposition to the Export-Import Bank and government-backed trade support it provides to big corporations.

Washington Post analyst James Hohmann described Clinton's "high-school debate" tactic as "the spread": "when you throw out so many arguments that your opponent cannot possibly respond to all of them".

Lost Michigan

Clinton declined to say why she lost Michigan when the polls had given her a commanding lead, but she did offer an explanation about why she is having a hard time with some Democrats.

Admitting that it was "painful" for her to hear that only 37 per cent of Americans consider her honest and trustworthy, according to a Washington Post poll released on Tuesday, Clinton took responsibility for her failings.

“I am not a natural politician, in case you haven’t noticed, like my husband or president Obama,” she said. “So I have a view that I just have to do the best I can.”

Sanders’s wins, as narrow as some are, are prolonging the Democratic race and show Clinton’s best is just not enough for some in her party’s base.