Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

MODERATORS PICKED

for top-spot debates.

- DAVID BAUDER

NEW YORK — NBC News chief anchor Lester Holt will moderate the first of three scheduled debates between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump on Sept. 26, with ABC’s Martha Raddatz, CNN’s Anderson Cooper and Fox News Channel’s Chris Wallace lined up for the others.

The Commission on Presidenti­al Debates also said Friday that CBS News’ Elaine Quijano will moderate the vice presidenti­al debate between Republican Mike Pence and Democrat Tim Kaine on Oct. 4.

The third presidenti­al debate, to be moderated by Wallace on Oct. 19, and the first will be traditiona­l Q&A sessions with the journalist choosing the topics. Raddatz and Cooper will team up for the second session on Oct. 9, a town hall-style meeting with half of the questions to be posed by audience members.

Each of the debates is scheduled for 90 minutes, with an 8 p.m. start time.

Clinton has said she will participat­e in all three debates. Trump has not formally agreed although he has reportedly been preparing to debate. There was no immediate reaction from the candidates to the chosen moderators. The campaigns have no say in who is selected.

Millions of people will be watching and ready to critique performanc­es. Trump’s anger with Fox News’ Megyn Kelly was one of the primary campaign’s biggest stories, and it began because he didn’t like a debate question she asked about his attitude toward women.

The commission is bringing in new faces. None of those selected has moderated a general-election debate before although Raddatz did the 2012 vice presidenti­al debate between Joe Biden and Paul Ryan. Before Wallace’s selection, no Fox News personalit­y had been a general-election moderator.

It will be the first time since 1984 that the general-election campaign’s first debate won’t be moderated by the now-retired Jim Lehrer of PBS. Two other 2012 moderators, Candy Crowley of CNN and Bob Schieffer of CBS, are also no longer active in TV news.

Holt, who won the leadoff position, took over as NBC’s Nightly News anchor last year for Brian Williams and kept the broadcast on top of the ratings. The commission avoided potential political conflicts of interest by not selecting Kelly or ABC’s George Stephanopo­ulos, who was a White House aide to Clinton’s husband, former President Bill Clinton.

Fallout, however, included a letter of protest sent to the commission Friday by the president and chief executive officer of Univision, the nation’s most popular Spanish-language network. Randy Falco said he wanted to express his “disappoint­ment, and frankly disbelief” that no Hispanic journalist was selected as a moderator.

“It’s an abdication of your responsibi­lity to represent and reflect one of the largest and most influentia­l communitie­s in the U.S.,” Falco wrote.

Univision’s Jorge Ramos, who celebrates 30 years as anchor of the network’s evening newscast this fall, said this week that it was “high time” a Hispanic journalist was considered. He said he was interested and suggested others such as Jose Diaz-Balart of Telemundo and Maria Hinojosa of NPR.

Quijano is of Filipino descent. At 42, she’s the freshest face of Friday’s selections. She’s an anchor and leads political coverage at CBSN, CBS’ 24-hour streaming service, and anchors CBS’ Sunday evening newscast.

Although he hasn’t done a general-election debate, Wallace has moderated GOP primary debates with colleagues Kelly and Bret Baier. During the primaries, Cooper moderated two debates and seven town halls on CNN.

Wallace said he was excited by the opportunit­y.

“They knew I was interested,” he said. “You kind of put the word out there to the debate commission, but you can’t lobby for it. You can’t do anything. They end up deciding it.”

The commission, chaired by former Republican National Committee head Frank Fahrenkopf and former Bill Clinton press secretary Mike McCurry, says little about its selection process.

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