Sen. Amy Klobuchar looked to build on her strong October performance in Wednesday's Democratic debate, sticking to her message of midwestern pragmatism as she took swipes at South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg, a rival rising in the polls.
As Pat Condon reports in today's Star Tribune: "Klobuchar vied for attention among 10 other candidates — landing a few laugh lines and mounting her argument that she will unite the country with achievable goals that independent and Republican voters can support."
So how did it land? And was it enough to boost the Minnesota Democrat, who's been locked in the single-digits in the polls for months, in the final months ahead of the Iowa Caucuses? Here's a look at what pundits and political journalists are saying about Klobuchar's performance in Atlanta:
The Washington Post's Aaron Blake put Klobuchar in the "winner" column:
"She's shown perhaps less momentum in Iowa, but she's rising slightly. She repeatedly, and effectively, argued that she has won in a swing state, including in red areas, and her sometimes-corny jokes finally seemed to land."
Chris Cillizza at CNN's The Fix did, too:
"The Minnesota senator has been desperately searching for a moment over the first four debates -- and she might just have found one Wednesday night. ... Klobuchar's biggest issue is that the pragmatic center lane has been dominated by Buttigieg and former Vice President Joe Biden. Her performance on Wednesday night might just change that."
Over at Fox News, Mary Anne Marsh wrote that Klobuchar "had her best performance by emphasizing her experience, productivity, electoral successes."