Democrat and Chronicle

Will candidates debate? Do they need to?

There’s no commitment yet for likely opponents

- Adriana Gomez Licon and Seung Min Kim

WASHINGTON – Nikki Haley is challengin­g Donald Trump to debate. Trump is challengin­g Joe Biden to debate. And Biden is laughing Trump off, at least publicly.

But there are real questions about whether any of them will confront each other on a stage this year.

Biden’s reelection campaign has repeatedly declined to commit to joining debates with Trump, his likely opponent in the November general election. Trump, meanwhile, has feuded with the Republican National Committee and refused to join its primary debates. In 2020, he objected to the rules of the nonpartisa­n commission that has hosted general election debates since 1976.

While any disputes could be resolved by the fall, the uncertaint­y reflects how both Biden and Trump are increasing­ly choosing to reach voters in environmen­ts they control at the expense of nonpartisa­n interviews or events where they might face unfriendly questions. Both the 81-year-old Biden and 77-yearold Trump have at times confused names and countries and face widespread doubts from voters about their age and readiness.

There’s also lingering animosity over how their debates went four years ago.

Sen. Chris Coons of Delaware, a longtime Biden confidant, noted that he was in the room for the chaotic September 2020 debate when Trump repeatedly interrupte­d Biden and moderator Chris Wallace.

Lowering his voice to a whisper,

Coons said: “That was bad.”

He then questioned whether a general election debate this year would be worth it.

“It’s challengin­g to imagine, given that the RNC and the Trump campaign have said they will have nothing to do with the Commission on Presidenti­al Debates and given his previous conduct, it’s hard to imagine it being productive,” Coons said. “But this is ultimately a judgment call for President Biden.”

Debates are not mandatory, but they are considered a traditiona­l test for candidates where they have no aids or teleprompt­ers. The first televised presidenti­al debate was in 1960 between Richard Nixon and John F. Kennedy, but it didn’t become a recurring event until 1976 when the League of Women Voters begin sponsoring presidenti­al debates. They are now sponsored by the Commission on Presidenti­al Debates, a nonprofit establishe­d in 1987 that outlines the rules for each debate and selects the location, dates and moderators.

Frank Fahrenkopf, co-chair of the commission, says it’s too early to entirely write off the prospect of debates in 2024.

“There’s a history of candidates not being happy,” he said. “Despite that, it’s been part of American culture since 1976. There’s no question the American

people expect the men and women who want to be president of the United States to appear on the stage and answer questions and debate.”

Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., a member of the Biden campaign’s national advisory board, also said Biden and Trump should debate.

“They’re about democracy,” Khanna said of the debates. “And it’s important for the American people to understand the different visions of the candidates. Absolutely, the president should debate in the three fall debates that are traditiona­l, and Donald Trump should debate and not be afraid of that.”

While many political observers are looking ahead to a Biden-Trump rematch, Haley is still trying to get the former president’s attention in the Republican primary. The former U.N. ambassador has challenged Trump to “man up” for what she calls the “ultimate mental competency test,” referencin­g the exam for early onset dementia and other cognitive disorders that he took while in the White House. Her campaign has had someone dressed in an inflatable chicken costume appear at events holding a sign reading, “Trump Too Chicken To Debate.”

But the Republican National Committee stopped scheduling primary debates after the fourth debate in Alabama in December. The last one-on-one debate between Haley and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis was hosted by CNN on Jan. 10 in Iowa.

Trump is pushing Haley to drop out of the primary and taunting Biden instead. He called on Biden to start debating now “for the good of the country” despite the general election being eight months away.

“I’d like to debate him now because we should debate. We should debate for the good of the country,” Trump said last week on The Dan Bongino Show, saying that Biden “can’t do it because he can’t talk.”

Biden in response laughed and said,

“If I were him I’d want to debate me too. He’s got nothing else to do.”

Biden’s staff has repeatedly declined to commit to his participat­ion in debates. His campaign visited Alabama before the last GOP primary debate to hold a press conference. Asked then if Biden himself would debate in the fall, deputy campaign manager Quentin Fulks said officials would “look at the schedule.”

“We will have those conversati­ons,” Fulks said. “But right now,” Fulks added, “our focus is on making sure we continue to build out a campaign and infrastruc­ture that’s going to be able to be competitiv­e in 2024.”

Sen. Mitt Romney of Utah, who was the GOP’s 2012 nominee and participat­ed in three debates against President Barack Obama, said “of course” Trump and Biden should debate.

“This is a democracy of the United States of America. We need to hear from the people who want to be president and see if they have mental capacity and see what their positions are on issues,” Romney said. “It’s one thing to say you passed a competency test. But it’s another thing to actually have the American people listen to you debate. I want to hear both President Biden and President Trump.”

Romney dismissed Trump’s vendetta against the debate commission, as well as the Biden campaign’s noncommitt­al position on debates, as “excuses.”

“People always find excuses for why they don’t want to debate,” Romney said. “But you got a couple of old guys that don’t want to have people see how old they are.”

There’s at least one example – albeit in a key swing state rather than a national election – of a Democrat skipping debates and winning the election anyway.

Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs refused to debate Republican Kari Lake in 2022 on the grounds that Lake, a former television news anchor well-known for her

polished presence on screen, had spread falsehoods about elections, with her staff labeling Lake a “conspiracy theorist.” Hobbs won a tight race anyway.

In addition to his rallies where he speaks to cheering supporters sometimes for two hours at a time, Trump has also tried to pursue viral moments – visiting a fraternity before a college football game, going to a sports bar, and frequentin­g mixed-martial arts events.

Biden, meanwhile, has done fewer larger rallies and instead focused on small events like recent stops at a boba tea shop and a family’s kitchen. His team argues that’s more effective in a changed media landscape because TikTok videos and Instagram stories from those events reach more voters than television ads and speeches.

Patrick Stewart is a political science professor at the University of Arkansas who wrote a book titled “The Audience Decides: Applause-Cheering, Laughter, and Booing during Debates in the Trump Era.” He said debates are perhaps even more necessary in the era of deepfakes, where manipulate­d video or digital representa­tion is generated by artificial intelligen­ce.

“I trust my eyes if I can go ahead and watch it in real time,” Stewart said. “That’s why they matter very much because the viewers can make up their own mind by watching the candidates.”

But Jacob Thompson, 29, a firefighte­r and constable from Knoxville, Tennessee, who recently stopped by a Trump rally in Las Vegas, said Trump doesn’t really need to debate anymore as voters are familiar with his views and platform.

“We all know the real Donald Trump. And we’re all very proud of him,” he said. “People get offended by things that he says. And there’s a lot of things that he says that I wish he didn’t. However, I’m basing my opinion off of what he has done.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Donald Trump, left, repeatedly interrupte­d Joe Biden and moderator Chris Wallace during a chaotic September 2020 presidenti­al debate.
GETTY IMAGES Donald Trump, left, repeatedly interrupte­d Joe Biden and moderator Chris Wallace during a chaotic September 2020 presidenti­al debate.

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