Bangkok Post

Biden, Trump tone it down

Final pre-election debate dares to canvass the issues, writes Alexander Burns

- NYT

President Donald Trump and Joe Biden delivered starkly divergent closing arguments to the country in the final presidenti­al debate yesterday, offering opposite prognoses for the coronaviru­s pandemic and airing irreconcil­able difference­s on subjects from rescuing the economy and bolstering the health care system to fighting climate change and reshaping immigratio­n policy.

The debate was, on the whole, a more restrained affair than the first encounter between the two candidates last month, when Mr Trump harangued Mr Biden for most of an hour and a half and effectivel­y shortcircu­ited any policy debate. But if the tenor of yesterday’s forum was more sedate, the conflict in matters of substance and vision could not have been more dramatic.

From the opening minutes, the two candidates took opposing stances on the pandemic, with Mr Trump promising that the disease was “going away” while Mr Biden called for much more aggressive federal action for the “dark winter” ahead.

Mr Trump, who badgered Mr Biden with increasing aggression over the course of the debate, appeared determined to cast his opponent as a career politician who was, as he jabbed toward the end of the debate, “all talk and no action.” And the president used the event as his most prominent platform yet for airing attacks about the finances of Mr Biden and members of his family.

Mr Trump, however, did little to lay out an affirmativ­e case for his own reelection, or to explain in clear terms what he would hope to do with another four years in the White House. On his most important political vulnerabil­ity — his mismanagem­ent of the pandemic — Mr Trump hewed unswerving­ly to a message that happy days are nearly here again, even as polls show that a majority of voters believe the worst of the coronaviru­s crisis is still ahead.

Trailing in a series of crucial swing states, and with 48 million Americans having already voted, the president was under more pressure. But while he proved he can engage in a more convention­al political jousting, it was less clear whether his performanc­e could prompt people who dislike him to reconsider their wellingrai­ned perception­s.

Mr Biden, for his part, stuck to the core of the argument that has propelled his campaign from the start, denouncing Mr Trump as a divisive and unethical leader who has botched the federal response to a devastatin­g public-health crisis. Though Mr Trump pushed him onto the defensive repeatedly, the former vice president also laid out a fuller version of his own policy agenda than he managed in the first debate, calling for large-scale economic stimulus spending, new aid to states battling the pandemic and a muscular expansion of health care and worker benefits nationwide.

Of all the disagreeme­nts between the two candidates, none blazed more brightly than their assessment­s of the US experience battling the coronaviru­s. Prompted by the moderator, Kristen Welker of NBC News, to explain his plan for the coming months, Mr Trump stuck to the sunny message he has delivered at recent campaign rallies, promising a vaccine in short order and citing his own recovery from a bout with the virus as an example of medical progress. The president boasted that he was now “immune” to the disease and insisted that states like Texas and Florida had seen the virus fade away, even as case counts are on the rise across the country.

“I’ve been congratula­ted by the heads of many countries on what we’ve been able to do,” Mr Trump said.

Mr Biden, in response, pressed a focused and familiar line of attack against the president, faulting him for doing “virtually nothing” to head off the pandemic early this year and heading into the coldest part of the year with no defined plan to control the virus. Holding up a face mask, Mr Biden said he would encourage all Americans to don them and would ramp up rapid testing on a national scale.

“We’re about to go into a dark winter, a dark winter, and he has no clear plan,” Mr Biden said. Mr Trump shot back: “I don’t think we’re going to have a dark winter at all — we’re opening up our country.”

But when the president said “we’re learning to live with” the coronaviru­s, Mr Biden pounced. “We’re learning to die with it,” he said.

The debate, at Belmont University in Nashville, Tennessee, represente­d perhaps the last opportunit­y for Mr Trump to shake up the presidenti­al campaign and claw his way into closer contention against Biden with just 11 days remaining. Mr Trump was more coherent than in the first debate, getting off a series of attack lines depicting Mr Biden as a career politician and avoiding harsh personal critiques of his children.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden, right, and President Donald Trump.
REUTERS Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden, right, and President Donald Trump.

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