US
elections 2020
Trump and Biden in bitterly personal clash at
first presidential debate
Candidates throw insults amid arguments over
healthcare, coronavirus and supreme court
Lauren
Gambino in Washington
@laurenegambino
Wed 30 Sep
2020 03.26 BSTFirst published on Wed 30 Sep 2020 01.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/sep/29/us-debate-trump-biden-latest-2020-presidential-news
Donald
Trump and Joe Biden sparred bitterly during the first presidential debate of
the general election on Tuesday night, hurling personal insults as they clashed
over healthcare, the coronavirus and the supreme court.
Ignoring
the rules, the candidates repeatedly interrupted each other, with Biden losing
his patience at one point and retorting: “Will you shut up, man? This is so
unpresidential.”
At another
point, Trump wrestled with the moderator, the Fox News anchor Chris Wallace,
complaining: “I guess I’m debating you, not him. But that’s OK, I’m not
surprised.”
“The fact
is that everything he’s said so far is simply a lie,” Biden said. “I’m not here
to call out his lies. Everybody knows he’s a liar.”
Trump,
pressed on new revelations that he avoided paying federal taxes for years and
paid only $750 in 2016 and 2017, claimed he had paid “millions of dollars” in
taxes in those years. He bragged that he took advantage of tax loopholes and
that as a successful businessman he didn’t “want to pay taxes”.
Hours
before the debate, held in Cleveland, Ohio, Biden and his running mate, Kamala
Harris, released their 2019 tax returns. Breaking decades of precedent, Trump
has refused to release his tax returns to the public.
Both
campaigns have spent weeks preparing for the matchup, which was expected to
draw millions of viewers. In a segment on the coronavirus, Biden hammered Trump
over his handling of the pandemic, which has claimed nearly 205,000 American
lives.
“Do you
believe for a moment what he’s telling you, in light of all the lies he’s
telling you, about Covid?” Biden asked.
Ahead of
the debate, Trump’s allies attempted to cast Biden as incoherent and fanned
baseless online conspiracy theories that Biden requires cue cards or an
earpiece to answer questions.
In a
statement, Trump’s communications director, Tim Murtaugh, alleged that Biden’s
campaign had reneged on an agreement to a “pre-debate inspection for electronic
earpieces” and that his team sought “multiple breaks during the debate, which
President Trump doesn’t need”. Pointing to Trump’s demand that Biden submit to
a drug test, a suggestion Biden laughed off, Murtaugh said it was clear the
president’s opponent was looking for a “safety net” ahead of the debate.
Biden’s
campaign flatly denied the accusations.
Speaking to
reporters on Tuesday afternoon, the deputy campaign manager, Kate Bedingfield,
observed that Trump’s team appeared “concerned that he will not do well
tonight” and were “laying the groundwork for how they’re going to lie about
why”.
The debate
was centered around six pre-determined topics, which included: the candidates’
records, the Covid-19 crisis, the economy, the supreme court, race and violence
in American cities and the integrity of the election. Each topic will receive
15 minutes of discussion during the 90-minute affair.
The debate
was arguably Trump’s best opportunity to reset the presidential race in which
he is currently behind. The economy is the sole issue where Trump retains a
slight advantage over Biden, though even there his edge is slipping.
Majorities
of Americans consistently disapprove of Trump’s handling of the coronavirus
pandemic and believe his response to the racial justice protests have only made
matters worse.
On election
security, Trump may face scrutiny for his baseless attacks on mail-in balloting
and attempts to undermine confidence in the electoral system. Polls show that
Americans have lost faith in the electoral process, a sign that his efforts to
sow doubt ahead of the election are resonating.
Performance
is equally, if not more, important than the discussion. And in both style and
substance, Biden and Trump are opposites.
Trump, ever
the showman, has used past debates to shock and awe the audience with his
unorthodox approach. The approach worked in 2016, when Trump defeated his
better-prepared opponents. Biden, by contrast, delivered steady albeit less
memorable performances in many of the Democratic primary debates. And yet,
Biden emerged victorious from a field of agile debaters.
Looming
over the debate is whether anything either candidate says or does on Tuesday
night will sway voters. While nearly three in four voters said they planned to
watch the debate on Tuesday night, according to a recent Monmouth University
poll, just 3% of voters said it was “very likely” to affect their vote in
November.
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