Marin Independent Journal

Biden prepares to face debater of no restraint

- By Shane Goldmacher and Katie Glueck

Joe Biden was frustrated as he tried last year to prepare for an unwieldy debate season that stuffed as many as 11 other Democratic rivals onto a single stage. At some mock sessions, he was flanked by “Elizabeth Warren,” played by Jennifer Granholm, the former governor of Michigan, and “Bernie Sanders,” portrayed by Bob Bauer, the former White House counsel, as they peppered him with progressiv­e lines of attack.

Biden lamented privately to advisers— and occasional­ly in public — that it was nearly impossible to debate with such a crowd. “If you had a debate with five other people, youmight actually get a chance to say something,” Biden told donors in Hollywood last fall. He would deliver more forceful performanc­es as the field narrowed, he promised.

Now, Biden will get his chance. The former vice president will debate President Donald Trump for the first time Tuesday, a date circled for months as one of the most consequent­ial on the 2020

political calendar, and one of a dwindling number of chances for Trump to chip into Biden’s lead in the polls.

Given Biden’s current polling edge, his advisers have been downplayin­g the debate’s significan­ce even as the former vice president has plunged himself into days of intense preparatio­ns. He is rehearsing and studying his briefing books Biden has long preferred the Arial typeface, 14 point in a process overseen by his longtime adviser and former chief of staff, Ron Klain, who similarly ran Hillary Clinton’s debate camp.

“It is definitely one of the last things that could move the race,” said Jay Carney, the former White House press secretary under President Barack Obama and a former adviser to Biden. “The odds of it moving the race are not high. But there are not that many opportunit­ies.”

The risks for Biden are manifold. Allies and people who have coached him for past debates fret about his temper and tendency toward defensiven­ess when it comes to his own lengthy record. His debate showings during the 2020 primary ultimately sufficient to win were often marked by meandering digression­s and antiquated references and were rarely, if ever, hailed as command performanc­es.

And in Trump, he faces an asymmetric­al antagonist, someone who has no qualms about deploying crudity, insults, distortion­s and falsehoods for political advantage. The absence of guardrails is already evident. On Sunday, Trump demanded that Biden should have to take some kind of drug test before the debate.

The president, who has undertaken less formal debate prep, has mused with aides about bringing up the business dealings of Biden’s son Hunter and the sexual assault accusation­s of Tara Reade, which have otherwise faded from the campaign.

Trump has already engaged in months of relentless and often misleading attacks on Biden’s mental acuity that have lowered the bar for the Democrat. A strong performanc­e in the first 45 minutes could torpedo that line of attack with many viewers, while Republican­s are eager to seize on any verbal missteps to push often- distorted storylines about Biden.

Biden has repeatedly signaled his determinat­ion to avoid a repeat of 2016 and Trump’s ugly clashes with Clinton, and he has secondgues­sed whether her response onstage to the “Access Hollywood” tape wound up sullying them both. He has cast her response as a missed opportunit­y to turn the subject back to her agenda.

“I hope I don’t get baited into getting into a brawl with this guy,” Biden told donors at a fundraiser this month.

The debate will represent the first joint appearance of the general election for two candidates who offer starkly different visions of the country, and whose campaigns have reflected those contrasts. Trump, 74, against the advice of public health officials, has been drawing thousands of supporters for large rallies at which he and many of his supporters do not wear masks. Biden, 77, almost always masked in public, has adhered to a more limited schedule, with white circles taped to the ground during small gatherings to delineate the appropriat­e social distances attendees must maintain.

That contrast could be the first visual of thedebate, especially if Biden emerges wearing a mask. Biden has spent the past six months employing a play- it- safe strategy health-wise and politicall­y by campaignin­g mostly virtually from his Delaware home and making Trump’s response to a pandemic that has now cost more than 200,000 lives the focal point of the election.

His advisers want the debate and the race itself to be a referendum on Trump’s stewardshi­p of the health crisis, even as Trump’s rush to fill a Supreme Court vacancy has created a new flash point.

“The Biden campaign wants a campaign that only includes Donald Trump,” said Brad Todd, a veteran Republican strategist. “The Trump campaign wants Donald Trump vs. Joe Biden. And on debate night, the Trump campaign is going to get what it wants.”

Still, Biden’s team has provided talking points to surrogates outlining their belief that little can occur onstage that will fundamenta­lly change the shape of the race.

David Axelrod, the former chief strategist to Obama, who attended some of Biden’s vice presidenti­al debate preparatio­ns, said that going up against Trump “is not like preparing for a normal debate.”

“How do you deal with serial lying?” Axelrod said. “How do you deal with the provocatio­ns. He can be exasperati­ng. How much do you want to tangle with himon every point? How do you keep from going down rabbit holes that don’t really lead anywhere?”

Biden’s advisers have signaled that the former vice president does not plan to spend most of his time factchecki­ng Trump, and hopes the moderator, Chris Wallace of Fox News, fills that breach.

“If you take on that role, you seem small,” Carney said.

The 90-minute debate will be divided into six segments, selected by Wallace: the pandemic, the economy, the Supreme Court, the “integrity of the election,” the “Trump and Biden records” and “race and violence in our cities.” The latter has led to some Democratic objections for its framing around violence in cities a centerpiec­e of Trump’s advertisin­g over the summer rather than around police brutality and calls for racial justice.

During the Democratic primary, Biden, steeped in the more civil politics of a previous era, was sometimes reluctant to lace into his opponents too vigorously. Allies expect no such inhibition­s against Trump, a man whose approach to politics and power plainly offends Biden at a visceral level.

“With Democratic opponents, he was dealing with family,” said Rep. Donald McEachin, D-Va., an early Biden supporter. He predicted a more aggressive posture Tuesday, saying Biden “won’t be afraid to throw a punch.”

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate former Joe Biden speaks at the Queen Theater in Wilmington, Del., on Sunday. He will debate President Donald Trump for the first time tonight.
ANDREW HARNIK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Democratic presidenti­al candidate former Joe Biden speaks at the Queen Theater in Wilmington, Del., on Sunday. He will debate President Donald Trump for the first time tonight.

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