Lodi News-Sentinel

Harris and Pence set to debate as virus spreads

- By Tyler Pager and Mario Parker

Mike Pence and Kamala Harris will take the stage Wednesday night under extraordin­ary circumstan­ces that will elevate the oft-forgotten vice presidenti­al debate to the highest-stakes running mate matchup in years.

With President Donald Trump fresh out of the hospital but still battling the coronaviru­s, both Pence and Harris will have to reassure voters that they can step into the presidency if either of the septuagena­rians who top the tickets become incapacita­ted.

A week after Trump and Democratic nominee Joe Biden squared off in a combative and chaotic debate, Pence and Harris will meet at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City under dramatical­ly different circumstan­ces. Not only have the safety precaution­s become stricter since at least 10 people who live or work at the White House have become infected, but the tone is expected to be more civil as well.

The debate will be divided into nine discussion categories, each lasting about 10 minutes.

Although the Trump campaign opposed it, Harris’s staff won an argument to have a plexiglass shield separating her and Pence, who has tested negative for the virus that sent Trump to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center for three days. The candidates will be a little more than 12 feet (3.7 meters) apart, and the moderator, Susan Page of USA Today, will also be that distance, the Commission on Presidenti­al Debates said Monday.

Anyone who refuses to wear a mask will be “escorted out,” the commission said. The first family and some of Trump’s guests refused to wear masks at last week’s debate.

“This VP debate will get a lot more attention than they usually do,” said Charlie Black, a veteran Republican strategist. “So it’s an opportunit­y for both candidates. I actually expect a good debate. Pence does a good job of presenting the president’s case, his ac-

complishme­nts and his ideas in a calm, measured manner. Harris has proved to be a good debater.”

The candidates are also less likely to sling the ad hominem attacks that highlighte­d the Sept. 29 debate in Cleveland between Trump and Biden. Harris will have to restrain the punches she used in her own presidenti­al run.

She has re-upped some of her lines since joining the Biden ticket, including calling Trump a “predator.” But with the president just a day or so out of the hospital, she is expected to shelve those attacks. That doesn’t mean she’ll hold back on criticizin­g the administra­tion for what Democrats say is a gross mismanagem­ent of the pandemic, especially given that Pence leads the White House coronaviru­s task force.

“It’s the perfect microcosm for the failure of the Trump administra­tion on coronaviru­s,” Democratic strategist Joel Payne said. “They became their own super spreader. They didn’t follow best practices. Harris can really effectivel­y use this last week as exhibit A of why Trump and Pence are dangerous and shouldn’t be leading this country out of the crisis. It’s the perfect closing argument for prosecutor Harris.”

Payne cautioned Harris to use her rhetorical skills honed as district attorney in San Francisco and as California’s attorney general to balance being critical without making light of the 74-year-old president’s health concerns.

Pence, by contrast, is likely to continue the Trump campaign’s attacks of painting Biden and Harris as Trojan horses for the progressiv­e wing of the Democratic Party and warning about a turn toward socialism. He is also expected to make the case that Trump is a better steward of the economy, the one issue where Trump still narrowly polls ahead of Biden.

“Kamala Harris is the most liberal member of the entire U.S. Senate and she serves to push Joe Biden even further to the left,” Tim Murtaugh, a Trump campaign spokesman said.

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