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Can the debate turn it around for Trump?

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The campaign debate Thursday is President Donald Trump’s last chance to throw a long ball.

Trailing by double digits in national polls and single digits in battlegrou­nd states he needs, Trump faces a tough task at the forum in Nashville, Tennessee. He needs to turn a race that has become a referendum on his handling of the coronaviru­s into a choice between him and an opponent he blasts as weak and dangerous.

For former Vice President Joe Biden, the job is easier: Don’t rock the boat.

“The debate will give Trump his last big platform for reaching the entire nation, not just his supporters or his acolytes in the conservati­ve media, so there’s a lot riding on it for him,” said

Alan Schroeder, a Northeaste­rn University professor and author of “Presidenti­al Debates: 50 Years of High- Risk TV.” “Biden’s chief task is to let Trump be Trump and, to the extent possible, get out of his way while he self- implodes.”

In their debate three weeks ago, Trump interrupte­d and heckled Biden so relentless­ly that the Commission on Presidenti­al Debates has added a mute button, a device never before considered necessary. After that first debate, in Cleveland, 60% of viewers rated Biden’s performanc­e as “good,” according to an Ipsos poll, and 66% rated Trump’s performanc­e as “poor.”

It wasn’t clear whether anyone’s vote was changed.

That’s another challenge for Trump. Views are so firmly entrenched that the pool of voters open to persuasion has nearly evaporated. In a Yahoo News/ YouGov poll released this week, just 5% of likely voters are undecided, and only 3% say there is even “a chance I will change my mind.”

Nearly 42 million Americans had cast their ballots by midday Wednesday, according to tracking by the U. S. Elections Project. The unpreceden­ted flood of early and mail- in voting has been fueled by concerns about COVID- 19, the prospect of Election Day disruption­s and supercharg­ed interest in the election by both sides.

“It’s the last big event of the campaign, and time is running out,” said Carroll Doherty of the nonpartisa­n Pew Research Center, though a close election in a battlegrou­nd state might be tipped by the final debate.

The 90- minute debate is likely to draw an audience of more than 70 million viewers. For the second time during this campaign, which has been defined and upended by the pandemic, the two candidates for president will stand sideby- side as they discuss six big issues, from the economy to climate change.

Turbulent times, a steady race

For a turbulent time, the head- tohead race has been remarkably steady.

Biden has led Trump from the time he clinched the Democratic nomination in March, though by a margin that has inched a bit wider over the past three weeks, according to a rolling average of polls by five thirty eight. com. Biden leads nationally by more than 10 percentage points, 52.2%- 41.9%, and has an edge of 6 to 8 points in the trio of Midwestern states that were crucial to Trump’s victory in the Electoral College four years ago – Michigan, Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin.

Trump isn’t the first incumbent president to be panned for his performanc­e in the first debate of his reelection campaign. In 1984, President Ronald Reagan was so meandering in his first debate against Democrat Walter Mondale that it fueled questions about his mental fitness. In 2012, Barack Obama seemed disengaged in his first debate against Republican Mitt Romney.

Both Reagan and Obama recovered with strong performanc­es in the debates that followed, and both won second terms.

Trump strategist­s predict he will moderate his rhetoric the second time around. “When you talk about style and you talk about approach, I do think that President Trump is going to give Joe Biden a little bit more room to explain himself on some of these issues,” adviser Jason Miller said on “Fox News Sunday.”

Trump promised to try to knock Biden off his stride, including with questions about the business dealings of his son Hunter.

There have been no signs of temperance by the president on the stump in recent days. He has aired grievances and picked a public fight with Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious- disease specialist and someone who has higher favorable ratings than the president. Nor has Trump spent much time behind closed doors preparing for the debate, instead appearing at a series of combative rallies in states that he carried in 2016 but where he is now tied or trailing.

“The debate will give Trump his last big platform for reaching the entire nation, not just his supporters.” Alan Schroeder Northeaste­rn University

‘ It’s not going to be fair’

The debate rules have raised Trump’s ire. He called the commission’s decision to mute each candidate’s microphone while the other is given two minutes to speak at the beginning of each segment “crazy” and the debate itself a “setup.’

“It’s not going to be fair,” he said on “Fox & Friends” Tuesday. He denounced anchor Kristen Welker, a White House correspond­ent for NBC, as “terrible” and a “radical Democrat.”

But Trump didn’t say he wouldn’t show up. His refusal to participat­e virtually in a planned second debate prompted the commission to cancel the town- hall- style forum, a lost opportunit­y. Whatever his complaints, he doesn’t want to risk that again.

Twelve days before the balloting ends, no other tactic or event – not TV ads nor campaign rallies nor incendiary tweets – has so much potential to change this trajectory of the election. It is a last chance for the candidates to make their closing arguments.

The president needs the debate to shake up a race that he otherwise seems headed toward losing.

 ?? Susan Page Washington Bureau Chief USA TODAY ??
Susan Page Washington Bureau Chief USA TODAY

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