Shelby Daily Globe

Trump, biden teams debate debate: Virtual or not, next week?

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WASHINGTON (AP) — It’s suddenly unclear whether President Donald Trump and Democratic challenger Joe Biden will square off in debate again, where they might do so and whether they would face each other in person or virtually, on video screens.

Thursday’s backand-forth began with the nonpartisa­n Commission on Presidenti­al Debates announcing that next week’s event in Miami would be virtual after Trump tested positive for the virus and amid questions about whether he is still contagious.

The president’s reelection campaign abruptly pulled out of that event, while Biden’s advisers suggested it could be pushed back a week to Oct. 22. Trump’s team accepted that date but said a third debate should happen on Oct. 29 — just before Election Day — and said it wouldn’t accept virtual substitute­s.

Biden’s campaign promptly rejected debating on Oct. 29.

Despite the debate debate between the two campaigns, it is ultimately up to the commission to decide. And, even if Trump and Biden can agree on dates, the logistics could be a nightmare. Finding venues willing to reschedule on such short notice, in the middle of a pandemic, won’t be easy — and where the events might happen in Miami and then Nashville as planned is equally uncertain.

It’s yet another example of the pandemic upending the presidenti­al race, further disrupting the president’s efforts to shift focus away from a virus that has killed more than 210,000 Americans this year.

After Trump said he’d skip next week’s debate if it were virtual, Biden’s campaign countered by asking for next Thursday’s town hall style event — the second debate for the candidates — to instead be moved back a week “so the president is not able to evade accountabi­lity.”

Trump advisers counter-countered a short time later by saying the second debate should indeed be delayed until Oct. 22 and that a third should be reschedule­d for the following week, just before Election Day. And they insisted anew that the candidates must meet face to face.

The Biden campaign responded, “Donald Trump doesn’t make the debate schedule; the Debate Commission does.”

The commission made its original decision to go virtual citing the need to “to protect the health and safety of all involved with the second presidenti­al debate.” Some staffers associated with producing the debate raised safety concerns after Trump tested positive for the virus following his first faceoff with Biden last week, according to a person familiar with the matter.

But Trump, who is recovering from COVID-19 at the White House after spending three days in the hospital, insisted he’s in “great shape” and called the idea of a debate other than faceto-face a “joke.”

“I’m not going to do a virtual debate,” he told Fox Business moments after the original announceme­nt.

Biden’s campaign said he was prepared to move forward with the virtual debate next Thursday but also asked that the town hall version be reschedule­d for Oct. 22 with questions from voters.

A short time later, Trump 2020 campaign manager Bill Stepien responded, that, “The American people should not be deprived of the chance to see the two candidates for president debate face to face two more times just because the Commission on Presidenti­al Debates wants to protect Joe Biden.”

With less than four weeks until Election Day and with millions of voters casting early ballots, pressure is building on Trump to turn around a campaign that is trailing Biden nationally and in most battlegrou­nds, where the margin is narrower. A debate before an audience of tens of millions of television viewers could provide that reset.

But another debate could also expose Trump to political risks. GOP strategist­s say the party’s support began eroding after his seething performanc­e against Biden last week when he didn’t clearly denounce a white supremacis­t group.

Trump’s apparent unwillingn­ess to change his style to win back voters he needs — particular­ly women — was on display again Thursday during his Fox Business interview when he referred to Democratic vice presidenti­al nominee Kamala Harris as a “monster.”

The president’s campaign manager, Bill Stepien, said Trump would stage a rally rather than debate next Thursday, though it’s not yet clear if he will be well enough to do that.

“For the swamp creatures at the Presidenti­al Debate Commission to now rush to Joe Biden’s defense by unilateral­ly canceling an in-person debate is pathetic,” Stepien said in a statement. “The safety of all involved can easily be achieved without canceling a chance for voters to see both candidates go head to head. We’ll pass on this sad excuse to bail out Joe Biden and do a rally instead.”

It’s not the first time Trump has skipped a debate. During the 2016 Republican primary, he boycotted the last debate before Iowa’s first-in-the nation’s caucuses, holding a fundraiser for veterans instead — a move he later speculated may have contribute­d to his loss in the state.

Boarding a flight to campaign in Arizona on Thursday, Biden said it would be “irresponsi­ble” for him to comment on Trump’s decision.

“We don’t know what the president’s going to do,” Biden said. “He changes his mind every second.”

It was unclear whether Biden would attend the debate by himself or whether the event would be fully scrapped. Asked about that prospect, Biden said, “We don’t know enough to know right now.”

His deputy campaign manager, Kate Bedingfiel­d, simply said Biden “looks forward to speaking directly to the American people.”

She said in a statement that Biden was prepared to accept a virtual town hall “but the president has refused, as Donald Trump clearly does not want to face questions from the voters about his failures on COVID and the economy.” Bedingfiel­d said instead Biden “will find an appropriat­e place to take questions from voters directly on October 15th, as he has done on several occasions in recent weeks.” But she also asked that the commission delay the scheduled town hall debate one week, to Oct. 22.

“The voters should have a chance to ask questions of both candidates, directly,” Bedingfiel­d said. “Every Presidenti­al candidate since 1992 has participat­ed in such an event, and it would be a shame if Donald Trump was the first to refuse.”

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