The Democratic National Committee needs to seriously reconsider its decision not to have any of its many primary debates on Fox News.

Sen.(D-N.Y.) participated in a CNN town hall this week that attracted just 491,000 viewers during primetime. Gillibrand drew the least viewers of any the 2020 presidential hopefuls who have done CNN town halls.

This isn't a matter of ideology but simple raw numbers that make the case quite clearly.

Comparatively, on the same night in the same time slot, Fox News' "The Ingraham Angle" attracted 2.38 million total viewers to win the hour, while MSNBC's "The Last Word with Lawrence O'Donnell" was second for the time slot with 1.86 million viewers.

Among the 25-54 demographic advertisers covet most, Fox News's Ingraham was first with 434,000 viewers, followed by O'Donnell with 300,000. CNN finished with 115,000 viewers in the category, the lowest total of 2019 at that hour among the three major cable news networks.

Numbers mean little without context, so consider this: When Fox News anchor Bret Baier interviewed Gillibrand a few weeks ago, the interview was seen by 2.1 million viewers. It drew more than quadruple the number of viewers who saw Gillibrand on CNN, despite airing before primetime (6 p.m. ET, 3 p.m. PT).

That's not to say candidates shouldn't appear on CNN town halls. Of course, all candidates should consider an hour of primetime TV on a national stage. There's also the fact there are more than a dozen candidates on the Democratic side — and growing. Standing out from the pack is essential to having anything resembling a chance in the primaries.

"What we have seen ... is that at the highest levels of Fox News they're not playing it straight,” Perez told MSNBC

Based on Perez's comments, you'd think hosts like Sean Hannity or Jeanine Pirro — both unapologetic and staunch supporters of the president — would be moderating a Democratic debate. But these events would obviously be moderated by those who work in the network's news division.



"Fox News Sunday" anchor Chris Wallace — who was arguably the most prepared, fair and measured moderator of any of the presidential debates in 2016 — would likely be the one asking Democratic candidates the questions. Baier would likely also be chosen for the job based on his 2016 debate performance.

"For better or for worse — and it is for worse — for whatever reason, you know, Fox has a huge viewing audience,” Sanders said Tuesday. "And to simply say that we’re not going to talk to millions of people who watch that network — I don’t think is smart.”

A Pew Research study released Sept. 2017 showed that 10 percent of Fox News viewers identified as liberal Democrats. Another 43 percent of Fox’s audience identified as conservative Republicans — meaning 47 percent don't identify as liberal Democrats or Republicans. Those voters could make a difference in the former blue wall of Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and Michigan — as well as the key states of Florida, North Carolina, Ohio, New Hampshire, Arizona, Nevada, Colorado and perhaps even states like Georgia and Missouri. ADVERTISEMENT The Sanders town hall on Fox News on April 15 will likely draw millions of viewers. Other Democratic candidates will see the numbers, and more importantly, see the press generated from a Democratic candidate being asked questions that few hosts are asking on other networks.

Sanders is a capable, candid candidate with lots of experience on these kinds of stages, including a Fox News town hall in 2016. Sanders will probably show the town hall is only a good thing in three regards: Showing the ability to answer hard questions, standing above the crowd and being seen by a bigger audience — including plenty of potential voters unhappy or apathetic with the current occupant in the Oval Office.