WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) — Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton on Wednesday stopped just short of calling Donald Trump a racist but made clear they were tired of listening to the Republican front-runner.

“I was the first one to call [Trump] out. When he was engaging in rhetoric that I found deeply offensive I said ‘basta,’” Clinton said to cheers and laughter from the bilingual crowd at Miami Dade College.

This led to an immediate spike in Google searches for the word “basta,” which translates loosely into “enough already.”

Not very long into their eighth debate, Karen Tumulty of the Washington Post asked Clinton: “Is Donald Trump a racist?”

Clinton demurred, but said there is no place in American politics for Trump’s “rhetoric, his demagoguery, his trafficking in prejudice and paranoia.”

Clinton and Sanders Discuss Whether Trump Is Racist

Asked the same question, Sanders also did not respond directly. He simply said the American people will never elect anyone as president who insults Mexicans, Muslims, women and African-Americans.

Clinton and Sanders were both on the offensive during the debate one night after Sanders scored a surprise victory in the Michigan primary. He said his victory would give his campaign new life just as Clinton was hoping to pivot away from the primary to focus on the general election.

Also read: Live blog recap of Wednesday’s debate

Immigration was the centerpiece of the debate as the two candidates vied for support from Latinos ahead of the Florida primary next Tuesday.

Both candidates made a pledge not to deport children and said they would push for comprehensive immigration reform with a path for citizenship for illegal immigrants.

Clinton scoffed when asked if she would drop out of the race if she was indicted for using a private email server when she was secretary of state.

“Oh, for goodness sake, it is not going to happen. I am not even answering that question,” she said.