Haley draws fire in 4th GOP debate, Christie warns absent Trump is biggest issue

The Iowa caucuses are weeks away; the former president remains the favorite.

By538 and ABC News
Last Updated: December 6, 2023, 6:01 PM EST

With voting set to start in the 2024 Republican primary in less than six weeks, four of the top candidates again took the stage for a debate -- this time on Wednesday night in Tuscaloosa, Alabama -- and the event proved to be fiery.

Hosted by NewsNation and moderated by Elizabeth Vargas, Megyn Kelly and Eliana Johnson, the debate featured Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley, former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and businessman Vivek Ramaswamy. The primary's front-runner, former President Donald Trump, continued to skip the event despite criticism from his rivals. He was fundraising in Florida.

ABC News and the analysts at 538 live-blogged every major moment and highlight from the debate. PolitiFact made real-time fact checks.

Key moments:

Here's how the news developed. All times Eastern.
Dec 06, 2023, 9:26 PM EST

DeSantis says Trump’s age is an issue but won’t call him unfit

“Father time is undefeated,” DeSantis told the debate audience twice, raising doubts over Trump’s age, at 77 years old, amid intervening attacks from Christie that he avoided the original question.

“He’s afraid to answer … this is the problem with my three colleagues,” Christie said. “They’re afraid to offend.” DeSantis wouldn’t respond to repeated questions by Christie and the moderators on the former president’s fitness for office.

“I’ll concede you’re fit, Ron,” Christie said. “You’re a new generation.”

- ABC News’ Chris Boccia

Dec 06, 2023, 9:26 PM EST

Christie on Trump: 'Be careful of what you'll get' with another term

Addressing Trump's comments in an interview on Tuesday referring to himself as a "dictator" but only on "Day 1," Christie called the former president an "angry, bitter man who now wants to be back as president because he wants to exact retribution on anyone who has disagreed with him."

"Do I think he was kidding when he said was a dictator? All you have to do is look at the history," he said. "That's why failing to speak out against him, making excuses for him, pretending that somehow he's a victim empowers him."

Christie -- who Trump has dismissed as a failure both as a governor and candidate -- charged that the other hopefuls on stage "make it seem like his conduct is acceptable" because they said they would still support him if he was convicted of federal felonies, which Trump denies.

"Let me make it clear: His conduct is unacceptable," Christie said. "He's unfit."

Christie warned to "be careful of what you'll get."

"He will only be his own retribution. He doesn't care for the American people. It is Donald Trump first," he said, eliciting some boos from the crowd.

-ABC News' Meredith Deliso

Dec 06, 2023, 9:20 PM EST

Fact-check: Banking experts knock idea of 'central bank digital currency'

Banking experts told PolitiFact that DeSantis’ claim about President Joe Biden pushing a “central bank digital currency” was dubious. Even if the system were technically feasible, current U.S. laws would not permit the kinds of monetary surveillance and control that DeSantis described, they told PolitiFact in April. The Federal Reserve is studying the possibility of creating a digital currency. But DeSantis’ remarks overstate the likelihood that such a system is possible, much less likely, to emerge in the United States -- for a variety of technical, legal and political reasons, experts told us.

-Analysis by Katie Sanders of PolitiFact

Dec 06, 2023, 9:09 PM EST

The Muslim ban was unpopular

The moderators asked a question about Trump’s 2017 executive order barring immigrants from seven predominantly Muslim countries. That order led to nationwide protests and was highly divisive: 53% of Americans in a CNN/ORC poll said they opposed it at the time, while 47% said they supported it.

-Analysis by Nathaniel Rakich of 538

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