Santa Fe New Mexican

Trump seeks 4th debate; Biden camp pushes back

- By Matt Viser

WASHINGTON — Joe Biden’s campaign on Monday committed to three scheduled debates with President Donald Trump in September and October and criticized the president for taking varied positions on whether and how many debates he would participat­e in.

The campaign’s letter to the Commission on Presidenti­al Debates, obtained by the Washington Post and written by Biden campaign manager Jen O’Malley Dillon, stated Biden will participat­e in the debates already planned by the commission, which would be Sept. 29, Oct. 15 and Oct. 22. Biden’s yet-to-be-named running mate would participat­e in an Oct. 7 vice presidenti­al debate.

“Joe Biden looks forward to facing Donald Trump in a multi-debate series that the American people have come to expect from their leaders; we hope that President Trump would not break that tradition or make excuses for a refusal to participat­e,” O’Malley Dillon wrote in the campaign’s first formal communicat­ion with the commission that oversees presidenti­al debates.

The letter came several days after top Trump aides, including former New York mayor and current presidenti­al adviser Rudy Giuliani, began pushing for four presidenti­al debates, and also called on them to be held earlier than usual so that Americans voting early can make their decisions. That push followed Trump’s suggestion earlier this year that he might not participat­e in debates at all, a position that seems to have changed with Trump’s slumping standing against Biden in recent polls.

“We want fair debates. We want them sooner, and we want a bigger schedule,” Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale said last week. “We also don’t want them up against football games competing for viewers. As many Americans as possible need to see the stark difference­s between the accomplish­ments and leadership of President Trump and the failed record and sleepiness of Joe Biden.”

After the Post obtained the Biden letter, Trump campaign spokesman Tim Murtaugh accused Biden of trying to avoid debating Trump.

“It’s pretty obvious that Joe Biden’s handlers are afraid to send their candidate out without a script and teleprompt­er handy,” said Murtaugh, whose candidate also uses such aids. “An earlier and longer debate schedule is necessary so Americans can see the clear difference between President Trump’s vibrant leadership and Biden’s confused meandering.”

Frank Fahrenkopf, a chairman of the debate commission, said last week that if the Trump and Biden campaigns agreed on holding a fourth debate, the commission would do everything it could to make it happen.

Biden advisers said they immediatel­y laughed at the push from Trump’s campaign, and pointed to the contradict­ion between him blasting mail-in ballots on one hand and his advisers using mail-in ballots as a rationale for holding earlier debates on the other.

Biden’s campaign firmly stated in the new letter that it wants the debates to be conducted as they have been traditiona­lly.

“No one should be fooled: the Trump campaign’s new position is a debate distractio­n,” O’Malley

Dillon wrote. “The Trump position seems to be saying that he will debate if he can pick the moderators: clearly the President, who largely conducts interviews only with favorable news outlets, is afraid of facing questions from a neutral moderator. The Trump campaign proposal for elaborate negotiatio­ns is merely an effort to dodge fair, even-handed debates.”

The letter also asked the commission to confirm that debate arrangemen­ts are made to accommodat­e concerns about the coronaviru­s and that social-distancing measures will be taken into account.

“Nothing should prevent the conduct of debates between Joe Biden and Donald Trump on these dates; again, we do not want to provide President Trump with any excuses for not debating,” O’Malley Dillon wrote.

She also requested that the commission continue to have one of the debates conducted using a town hall format, allowing voters to ask questions even if the coronaviru­s remains a concern. That format has been a standard in past presidenti­al debates.

“During his primary campaign, Vice President Biden welcomed direct questions from uncommitte­d voters on a frequent basis, and we think it is time that President Trump faced such questionin­g himself,” she wrote. “We know that voters have many, many questions for the President.”

 ??  ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate former Vice President Joe Biden and President Donald Trump have been set to face off in three debates this fall, including one in a town hall format. But the Trump campaign is pushing for one more.
Democratic presidenti­al candidate former Vice President Joe Biden and President Donald Trump have been set to face off in three debates this fall, including one in a town hall format. But the Trump campaign is pushing for one more.
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOS ??
ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOS

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