Monday, May 20, 2024
ADVT 
International

Here we go again: Trump, Biden reprise debate duel

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Oct, 2020 08:57 PM
  • Here we go again: Trump, Biden reprise debate duel

Television viewers across the United States and Canada might well wonder tonight why living room couches don't come with seat belts.

After last month's interruptive, insult-riddled debate performance against Joe Biden, Donald Trump has a chance to redeem himself — though observers don't expect him to try.

Instead, they're bracing for another show of vintage Trump, one in which he'll seek to be heard even in spite of his muted microphone.

The Commission on Presidential Debates will be cutting off the opposing mic during two-minute opening statements before each 15-minute segment.

Tonight's debate, hosted by Belmont University in Tennessee, will be moderated by NBC News correspondent Kristen Welker.

Topics will include American families, race relations, climate change, national security and leadership.

Trump's campaign manager Bill Stepien called the decision to cut off microphones an attempt by the commission "to provide advantage to their favoured candidate."

In fact, the commission said in a statement this week, it's designed to level the playing field for the two candidates.

"One may think they go too far, and one may think they do not go far enough," the statement said.

"We are comfortable these actions strike the right balance, and that they are in the best interest of the American people, for whom these debates are held."

During last month's clash in Ohio, Trump interrupted, antagonized and irritated his Democratic rival from the outset, vexing moderator Chris Wallace and eliciting an exasperated plea for order from Biden himself: "Will you shut up, man?"

And that was only the first 15 minutes.

It was hardly the most cutting insult of the night — Biden called Trump a "clown" and America's worst-ever president, while Trump branded his rival a drug-addled socialist and the Biden family a criminal enterprise.

But the "shut up" line emerged as the sound bite of the night, a fact that experts say offers clues into Biden's best strategy.

"My advice to Biden would be to do exactly that — have a few pithy one-liners. But they also have to be presidential," said Will Stewart, a former Progressive Conservative operative who's now a senior vice-president with Hill+Knowlton Strategies in Toronto.

"I think 'Shut up, man' was the wrong approach. I think it was tone-deaf; it sank to Donald Trump's level. It's also not presidential. And I don't care if you don't like Donald Trump, you respect the office of president."

This time, Biden would do well to ignore the president's "buzz saw" approach, or at least find a way to short-circuit it, said Stewart, who is no stranger to the rituals of debate prep.

As for Trump, the mission — should he choose to accept it — is a relatively easy and simple one, say veterans of debate strategy: stop being such a jerk.

Performing better than the public expects, which is Job 1 in a political debate, ought to be easy when the expectations of Trump likely couldn't sink lower.

On that, the experts agree. Also on this: don't hold your breath.

"I expect to see Trump very aggressive, fighting like someone who is behind in the polls and knows he needs to make up ground," said Gerald Butts, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's former principal secretary.

MORE International ARTICLES

Chinese city of Mongolia issues warning of bubonic plague amidst COVID-19

Chinese city of Mongolia issues warning of bubonic plague amidst COVID-19
Health officials in the northern Chinese region of Inner Mongolia have issued an early epidemic warning after a resident contracted bubonic plague.

Chinese city of Mongolia issues warning of bubonic plague amidst COVID-19

Sikh Pilgrims die in a bus and train crash in Pakistan

Sikh Pilgrims die in a bus and train crash in Pakistan
Some tragic news coming out of Pakistan. A passenger train crashed into a bus carrying Sikh pilgrims at an unmanned railway crossing in eastern Pakistan killing 22 people.

Sikh Pilgrims die in a bus and train crash in Pakistan

More fireworks in Americans' hands for July 4 raises risks

More fireworks in Americans' hands for July 4 raises risks
For many Americans, the Fourth of July will be more intimate this year. It also could be riskier.

More fireworks in Americans' hands for July 4 raises risks

A large Wendy's and Pizza Hut franchisee files for bankruptcy

A large Wendy's and Pizza Hut franchisee files for bankruptcy
Every economic sector around the globe has taken a hit during the COVID-19 pandemic but its the food industry that has experienced a major blow on the economic side. The United States, NPC International, the country's largest franchisee of Pizza Hut and Wendy's restaurants, has filed for bankruptcy

A large Wendy's and Pizza Hut franchisee files for bankruptcy

No smoking, drinking or eating as Atlantic City casinos open

No smoking, drinking or eating as Atlantic City casinos open
Atlantic City tried Prohibition once before. It worked so well that Nucky Johnson, the legendary politician and racketeer, built a Boardwalk empire immortalized on HBO nearly a century later.

No smoking, drinking or eating as Atlantic City casinos open

'Pooled testing' for COVID-19 holds promise, pitfalls

'Pooled testing' for COVID-19 holds promise, pitfalls
The nation's top health officials are banking on a new approach to dramatically boost U.S. screening for the coronavirus: combining test samples in batches instead of running them one by one.

'Pooled testing' for COVID-19 holds promise, pitfalls