With 20 candidates vying for attention—a number more suited to wrestling's Royal Rumble than a traditional debate—Democrats have split the field into two groups for debates in Miami on Wednesday and Thursday nights. Republicans who took part in their party's 10 and 11-person 2016 debates, however, say Democrats could still find it a struggle. "A 10-person debate is a mess," Sen. Ted Cruz tells the New York Times. "It’s a cacophony." Chris Christie adds: "With 10 people on the stage, you know, you’ll get seven to nine minutes, usually, of time to talk. So it’s very difficult to break through." More:
- No "undercard." NPR, which profiles all 20 candidates, reports that the Democratic National Committee and NBC wanted to avoid the "undercard" debates that the GOP had for low-polling candidates. Instead, they divided them into those polling above 2% and below 2%, then split them evenly between the two nights through random drawing.