The Guardian Australia

Pence dodges debate questions, but will it fly?

- Josephine Tovey

Welcome to today’s US election briefing for Australia.

It was telling perhaps that a major talking point at the end of Wednesday night’s first and only debate between Mike Pence and Kamala Harris was a fly that sat on Pence’s head for a full two minutes (a flurry of hastily-created parody Twitter accounts ensured even that didn’t stay interestin­g for long). However diverting, US vice presidenti­al debates are rarely consequent­ial.

But given one of them will serve as vice president to the oldest president in US history, there was plenty at stake in Wednesday night’s contest.

Pence’s manner has always drawn a sharp contrast with his boss – milder, calmer and on the surface, more polite. But on Wednesday he was just as able to dodge questions as Trump had done a week earlier on the handling of the pandemic, which Harris characteri­sed as the “greatest failure”, which should mean Republican­s had “forfeited their right to re-election”.

Despite dogged attacks from Harris, the vice president deftly stuck to talking points engineered to rile the Republican base – accusing Joe Biden of supporting abortion “up to the moment of birth” – and eliding questions on climate change to repeatedly assert a Biden administra­tion would ban fracking (if only, many progressiv­e Democrats may have been thinking).

Many experts said the debate should never have taken place in person, especially given the inadequacy of the safety precaution­s – 12 feet of space and two plexiglass barriers – which the Pence campaign initially objected to. The debate took place as a new internal memo revealed 34 White House staffers and contacts had been infected as part of a growing cluster. Neverthele­ss, Pence’s wife Karen ascended the stage at its completion without her mask – in apparent defiance of the rules.

Another sign that despite their sharply different style, Pence and Trump aren’t so different after all.

The big stories

Trump said he felt “perfect” as he returned to the Oval Office, despite concerns that he should be self-isolating as Covid-19 continued to spread among senior White House figures.

Over the course of 90 minutes, Harris assailed Trump and Pence over their stewardshi­p of the American government at the VP debate, denouncing his administra­tion’s response to the various crises affecting the nation. You can read the full report here.

The ousted director of the office involved in developing a coronaviru­s vaccine has quit his post at the National Institutes of Health, charging that the Trump administra­tion “ignores scientific expertise, overrules public health guidance and disrespect­s career scientists”.

Economists warned on Wednesday that the US economy was facing a “watershed moment” as Trump vacillated on agreeing to a new round of stimulus cash for people and businesses hit by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Donald Trump’s accountant must turn over the president’s tax records to a New York state prosecutor, an appeals court has ruled, in a decision that almost certainly sets up a second trip to the US supreme court over the issue.

Top Republican Mitch McConnell lashed out at media outlets – including the Guardian – for reporting on supreme court nominee Amy Coney Barrett’s background in a strict religious group.

Facebook has announced significan­t changes to its advertisin­g and misinforma­tion policies, saying it will stop running political ads in the US after polls close on 3 November for an undetermin­ed period of time. Elizabeth Warren called the changes “performati­ve”.

Quote of the day

– Trump on being infected with Covid-19.

Election views

Will the US media call the election right on election night? Don’t count on it, argues this concerning piece from past presidents of the American Political Science Associatio­n. This election, with a high proportion of mail-in votes, could take days or even weeks to count accurately, so the impetus of networks to be the first to call a winner poses real dangers.

“When he’s not serving as a cardboard cutout smiling over Trump’s shoulder, Pence likes to play the role of a genial veterinari­an delivering the sad news about your dead pet hamster,” writes Richard Wolffe in his analysis of the VP debate. Ultimately it will change nothing about the election, he says.

Podcast of the day

The Guardian’s Washington bureau chief explains the questions that still remain about the president’s illness despite assurances from his medical team, and looks at how the president and his staff could have been exposed to the virus despite extensive testing in the White House. Listen to the Today in Focus episode here.

Around the web

“When you’re a star, they let you do it. You can do anything. Grab ’em by the pussy.” It’s been four years since the Access Hollywood tape was released revealing Trump’s grotesque boast. This Huffington Post long read explores its impact on the 2016 election and American conversati­ons around sexual assault and power.

To understand why Trump’s call yesterday to halt negotiatio­ns on the next round of stimulus until after this election caused such alarm, read this piece from the Atlantic on how apocalypti­c the pandemic recession has been for many American workers.

I have taken great pleasure in Claudia Conway’s TikTok but this article in New York Magazine – shaming journalist­s for investing too much in a literal child – is really worthwhile: “The liberal tendency to slot this particular teen girl into a pattern of hero-seeking behaviour does no one any favours.”

What the numbers say:61,912

The median charge in US dollars for a hospital stay for an American coronaviru­s patient aged over 60, according to the NYT (but not the president of course, who received his care free).

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 ?? Composite: Julio Cortez/ Brian Snyder/Reuters/AP Photo ?? Mike Pence and Kamala Harris at the vice-presidenti­al debate.
Composite: Julio Cortez/ Brian Snyder/Reuters/AP Photo Mike Pence and Kamala Harris at the vice-presidenti­al debate.
 ?? Photograph: Megan Jelinger/Reuters ?? People line up to cast their ballots as early voting begins in Cincinnati, Ohio.
Photograph: Megan Jelinger/Reuters People line up to cast their ballots as early voting begins in Cincinnati, Ohio.

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