In Iowa, O'Malley and Sanders Say What Unions Wish Clinton Would

Hillary Clinton has disappointed some union leaders on issues like trade, but remains the overwhelming favorite to face off against a Republican come November 2016.

Democratic presidential candidate and former Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley speaks during an event at the Truman Center for National Policy July 23, 2015 in Washington, DC.

Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images
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While Republicans took the stage in waves for a pair of nationally televised presidential debates on Thursday, some of their would-be Democratic rivals were at a much lower-key forum in Altoona, Iowa, offering the state's union leaders words that they wished they could hear from the contender who wasn't there.

Appearing one at a time, four candidates—all the Democrats, except front-runner Hillary Clinton—each fielded the same eight questions from a panel of labor leaders. Two former senators and former Republicans, Lincoln Chafee and Jim Webb, took pains to highlight the union-friendly parts of their resumes, extolled the virtue of organized labor, and—except for when Chafee awkwardly, apologetically said he had to support the Trans-Pacific Partnership so as not to be a flip-flopper—mostly downplayed potential disagreements.