The Arizona Republic

STARK DIFFERENCE OVER SOLUTIONS

Trump, Biden clash over COVID-19, taxes

- Jonathan Lemire, Darlene Superville, Will Weissert and Michelle L. Price

NASHVILLE, Tenn. – President Donald Trump and Democratic challenger Joe Biden offered sharply different visions of how to handle the surging pandemic and fought over how much Trump pays in taxes during their final debate of a tumultuous campaign.

With Trump trailing and needing to change the campaign’s trajectory, the debate could prove pivotal though more than 46 million votes already have been cast and

there are fewer undecided voters than at this point in previous election years. The debate did not feature the repeated angry interrupti­ons of the candidates’ other showdown.

The night in Nashville began with a battle over the president’s handling of the pandemic, which has killed more than 222,000 Americans and cost millions of jobs. Trump declared that the virus will go away, while Biden warned that the nation was heading toward “a dark winter.” Polling suggests it is the campaign’s defining issue for voters, and Biden declared, “Anyone responsibl­e for that many deaths should not remain president of the United States of America.”

Trump defended his management of the nation’s most deadly health crisis in a century, dismissing Biden’s warning that the nation had a dire stretch ahead due to spikes in infections. And he promised that a vaccine would be ready in weeks.

“It will go away,” said Trump, staying with his optimistic assessment of the pandemic. “We’re rounding the turn. We’re rounding the corner. It’s going away.”

“We can’t keep this country closed. This is a massive country with a massive economy,” Trump said. “There’s depression, alcohol, drugs at a level nobody’s ever seen before. The cure cannot be worse than the problem itself.”

But Biden vowed that his administra­tion would defer to the scientists and

said that Trump’s divisive approach hindered the nation’s response. “I don’t look at this in the way he does – blue states and red states,” Biden said. “They’re all the United States. And look at all the states that are having a spike in the coronaviru­s – they’re the red states.”

Biden said that America has learned from a New York Times report that Trump paid only $750 a year in federal taxes while holding “a secret bank account” in China. The former vice president then noted he’s released all of his tax returns going back 22 years and challenged the president to release his returns, saying, “What are you hiding?”

Trump claimed his accountant­s told him he “prepaid tens of millions of dol

lars” in taxes. However, as he has for the past four years, after promising to release his taxes, he declined to say when he might do so.

As a reminder of the pandemic that has rewritten the norms of American society and fundamenta­lly changed the campaign, sheets of plexiglass had been installed onstage Wednesday between the two men. But before the debate, they were removed.

The debate, moderated by NBC’s Kristen Welker, was a final chance for each man to make his case to a television audience of tens of millions of voters. And questions swirled beforehand as to how Trump, whose hectoring performanc­e at the first debate was viewed

by aides as a mistake that turned off viewers, would perform amid a stretch of the campaign in which he has taken angry aim at the news media and unleashed deeply personal attacks on Biden and his adult son.

In an effort to curtail interrupti­ons this time, the Commission on Presidenti­al Debates announced that Trump and Biden would each have his microphone cut off while his rival delivered an opening two-minute answer to each of six debate topics.

When he feels cornered, Trump has often lashed out, going as negative as possible. In one stunning moment during the 2016 campaign, in an effort to deflect from the release of the Access Hollywood tape in which he is heard boasting about groping women, Trump held a press conference just before a debate with Hillary Clinton during which he appeared with women who had accused Bill Clinton of sexual assault. He then invited them to watch as audience members.

In a similar move, Trump’s campaign held another surprise pre-debate news conference, this time featuring Tony Bobulinski, a man who said he was Hunter Biden’s former business partner and made unproven allegation­s that the vice president’s son consulted with his father on China-related business dealings.

Biden declared the discussion about family entangleme­nts “malarkey” and accused Trump of not wanting to talk about the substantiv­e issues. Turning to the camera and the millions watching at home, he said, “It’s not about his family and my family. It’s about your family, and your family is hurting badly.”

 ?? CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/AP ?? President Donald Trump and Democratic presidenti­al candidate former Vice President Joe Biden participat­e in the final presidenti­al debate at Belmont University in Nashville, Tenn., on Thursday.
CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/AP President Donald Trump and Democratic presidenti­al candidate former Vice President Joe Biden participat­e in the final presidenti­al debate at Belmont University in Nashville, Tenn., on Thursday.
 ?? AP ?? Moderator Kristen Welker of NBC News listens as President Donald Trump and Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden debate on Thursday.
AP Moderator Kristen Welker of NBC News listens as President Donald Trump and Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden debate on Thursday.
 ?? AP ?? President Donald Trump makes a point during the final presidenti­al debate.
AP President Donald Trump makes a point during the final presidenti­al debate.
 ?? AP ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden argues a point in the debate.
AP Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden argues a point in the debate.

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