Hartford Courant

Trump’s debate bullying was an insult to the American people

- This editorial first appeared in the Los Angeles Times.

Anyone who watched Donald Trump’s debates with Hillary Clinton in 2016 was on notice that he would likely be aggressive and obnoxious in his first debate with Joe Biden. But Trump’s bullying performanc­e in Cleveland on Tuesday evening — which overwhelme­d moderator Chris Wallace — was an insult to the American people.

We can argue about which candidate won the debate, such as it was. Our view is that the former vice president, while put on the defensive by Trump’s insultcomi­c shtick, managed to focus effectivel­y on facts about Trump’s atrocious administra­tion that matter: his epic mismanagem­ent of the coronaviru­s pandemic, his failure to produce a health insurance plan to replace the Affordable Care Act, his stoking of racial divisions.

But we worry that these and other points were lost in the chaotic back-and-forth of the exchange. Americans could be excused for turning off the television in disgust, not only at Trump but at the failure of the Commission on Presidenti­al Debates to prevent the president from hijacking the forum. The commission has given Biden ample reason to refuse to participat­e in anymore such encounters, though his running mate, Sen. Kamala Harris of California, suggested afterward that he would not decline.

It was inevitable that Trump would play dirty, deflect questions about his mishandlin­g of the pandemic, and try to drag in the alleged misdeeds of Hunter Biden and “crooked Hillary.” Biden and Wallace no doubt expected that. But, as if sensing that he will lose this election, the president chose not to debate but to heckle. It was a disgusting and demeaning performanc­e that robbed the viewers — and the voters — of what should have been an exchange of facts and positions on a nation that faces challenges like none since the Depression and World

War II.

Amid the incessant interrupti­ons, Biden establishe­d himself as a voice of reason and compassion, striking a contrast to Trump’s unhinged rantings. Even when he was less than surefooted in answering Wallace’s questions — for example about whether he would support expanding the size of the Supreme Court — Biden projected seriousnes­s, civility and competence. But at times, Biden also engaged in name-calling, describing Trump as a “fool” and a “clown,” and even telling him to “shut up.” We understand his exasperati­on, but do not approve of such language in a debate.

Trump, meanwhile, was an exaggerate­d version of himself: crude, slanderous and demagogic. He ranted about familiar obsessions: “law and order,” the “fake media” and — the biggest and most dangerous lie of the night — his claim that mail-in balloting is associated with rampant fraud.

Asked by Wallace whether he would denounce “white supremacis­ts and groups to say they need to stand down and not add to the violence,” Trump essentiall­y shrugged and said, “Sure, I’m willing to do that,” immediatel­y adding, “Almost everything I see is from the left wing.

Not from the right wing.” He urged the Proud Boys, a violent group of xenophobes, to “stand back and stand by.”

As if that casual flirtation with violence — utterly antithetic­al to the norms of our constituti­onal democracy, the world’s oldest — weren’t enough, Trump also suggested that his followers monitor polling places to prevent fraud. (Independen­t experts have repeatedly found that any such fraud is minimal at best.) In doing so, Trump raised the specter of efforts to intimidate or harass voters seeking to exercise their constituti­onal rights, an echo of the ugly voter suppressio­n that has historical­ly disenfranc­hised Black Americans.

No doubt Trump’s performanc­e thrilled members of his base. But, given that he is trailing in polls and is losing mightily among female voters, he will need more than the support of “Make America great again” die-hards to win reelection. Voters who are not part of that cult could only have been disgusted by the president’s performanc­e.

Any voter who watched Tuesday’s sad excuse for a debate could have come away with only one conclusion: Donald Trump has been a disaster as president, and Joe Biden is the steady and sober leader we need to undo the damage Trump has inflicted on our economy, our society and our democracy.

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