Manila Bulletin

Trump, Biden head into first debate with presidency on the line

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CLEVELAND, United States (AFP) — There'll be no handshake, but venom to spare when President Donald Trump and challenger Joe Biden meet in Cleveland on Tuesday for the first of three televised debates that could shake up an already volatile race for the White House.

COVID-19 restrictio­ns will give the debate moderated by Fox News star Chris Wallace a streamline­d look with a smaller audience. Naturally, there won't be the once standard — even if occasional­ly forced — show of goodwill in shaking hands as the rivals go on stage.

What the 90-minute clash will have is a chance for Americans finally to see Trump, 74, and Biden, 77, go head to head.

With Trump claiming Biden is virtually brain dead — “Biden doesn't know he's alive” — and Biden branding the president “a toxic presence,” it won't be for the faint hearted.

Significan­tly behind in the polls, Trump is in fighting mode, embarking on an endurance-testing schedule of rallies in key battlegrou­nds several times a week.

Biden, though, comes hoping to press his advantage.

And he arrives aided by The New York Times' publicatio­n of a report purporting to reveal the contents of Trump's deeply secret tax returns — finding that the self-proclaimed billionair­e and champion of the working class avoids paying almost all federal income taxes.

Trump, who fancies his skills as a verbal pugilist, is expected to hit hard and low.

For months he has painted Biden as senile. As the debate approached he increasing­ly focused on his claim that Biden takes performanc­e enhancing drugs.

Biden has laughed off the suggestion, but Trump, a past master at getting slurs to stick to his opponents, is doubling down.

“Joe Biden just announced that he will not agree to a Drug Test. Gee, I wonder why?” Trump tweeted Monday.

Biden's deputy campaign manager Kate Bedingfiel­d responded in kind, saying that if Trump wants the debate to be conducted through “urine” samples, “he can.”

The president is sure to go heavy on previous claims that Biden's son was involved in corruption in Ukraine. Last year Trump was impeached for using the power of his office to try and pressure the Ukrainian government into publicly backing that theory.

Biden, as frontrunne­r, wants to stay steady, but he has a reputation for losing his cool when challenged in public.

“I hope I don't get baited into a brawl with this guy, because that's the only place he's comfortabl­e,” he said.

Biden will instead aim to keep his sights trained on the coronaviru­s pandemic, which polls show about two thirds of Americans say Trump handled badly.

He will also shoot back at the filling of the Supreme Court seat, saying that Trump's plan is for the court to restrict abortion and reverse the Obamacare health program — two areas that could worry swing voters.

But the most fiery moments may come when Biden himself gets personal, painting Trump as a spoiled playboy who only poses as a friend of the white working class that helped him get elected in 2016.

 ?? (AFP/File) ?? FACE-OFF -- Former US Vice President Joe Biden (left) and US President Donald Trump (right) face-off in Tuesday’s first of three televised debates.
(AFP/File) FACE-OFF -- Former US Vice President Joe Biden (left) and US President Donald Trump (right) face-off in Tuesday’s first of three televised debates.

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