Texarkana Gazette

Presidenti­al debate moderators don’t hide bias

- Richard E. Vatz

There has been quite a lot of controvers­y about the presidenti­al debates and the competing town halls between President Donald Trump and Joe Biden over whether they have been conducted on a level playing field.

They haven’t.

The unfairness charges have focused on the moderators, with the most salient partisan claim aimed at the deception of the scheduled moderator in the eventually aborted second presidenti­al debate.

As everyone who follows presidenti­al rhetoric and politics knows by now, C-SPAN’s Steve Scully was scheduled to moderate the second presidenti­al debate until he sent a tweet to Trump-hater Anthony Scaramucci soliciting advice about the president.

Scully claimed he was hacked, and then days later, while he left his supporters twisting in the wind, said he wasn’t. C-SPAN also said that Scully was hacked, and the Trump-hating Commission on Presidenti­al Debates echoed the hacking claim. (Seems there are a lot of Trump haters in positions of making “apolitical” decisions.)

Eventually, Scully admitted he lied and now will forever be tarnished, as well as all of his friends he allowed to publicly humiliate themselves by supporting his false claim.

The brilliant Fox News radio host Guy Benson, as honest as a journalist­ic pundit can be, said Scully is “the last character … that you would think would not be playing it straight and would cover up like that and get caught — it’s just stunning.”

Many others from the right and left had stood by Scully, all due to his having the perceived integrity to moderate a sure-to-be contentiou­s debate (again, later canceled), despite his having a long history of supporting Democrats and having tweeted terribly disparagin­g points about the president.

The Washington Post’s Karen Tumulty dutifully tweeted her belief in Scully, as did other usual suspects, but also there were credibilit­y experts on the right who were credulous, such as Fox’s Chris Wallace and Karl Rove (say it ain’t so, Karl).

NBC moderator Savannah Guthrie’s unrelentin­g attack on the president at NBC’s “Town Hall” last week, including interrupti­ng and talking over him, and haranguing him as well as dominating the time in an advertised public questionin­g of Trump, was praised by some as representi­ng the tough style that debates should have. This GuthrieTru­mp clash, however, was over the top, and, like George Stephanopo­ulos’ town hall, employed a Democratic­friendly agenda and spin, with both moderators’ ignoring Hunter Biden’s involvemen­t with the Ukrainian energy company Burisma.

The latter town hall also included a question from an audience member who was a former Obama administra­tion Commerce Department speechwrit­er.

It’s not difficult to be fair to candidates with whom you disagree. I have moderated many debates between Democratic and Republican candidates and never had a complaint. But the moderator must be more dedicated to political fairness than winning approval from his or her employer or group of profession­al friends. Nothing destroys disinteres­t like unprofessi­onalism.

The hatred for Trump allows people who are generally honest to rationaliz­e that “Everything’s fair, including suspending integrity, in getting rid of Trump.”

None of this is to claim that fairness and probity is the provenance of the right; it is just to say that seriously ethical people are few and far between, and when honesty gets sociologic­ally pressured, there are few who shine — but there are some. Debate commission­s should expend some effort to find them.

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