GOP DEBATE in 2016
Jaws without the shark: absent Trump looms over
Republicans’ first debate
Burgum, Christie, DeSantis, Haley, Pence, Ramaswamy
and Scott will be present in Milwaukee on Wednesday but will anyone dent
ex-president’s lead?
David Smith
David Smith
in Washington
@smithinamerica
Sun 20 Aug
2023 08.00 EDT
It may end
up being Hamlet without the prince or, perhaps more aptly, Jaws without the
shark.
When
Republicans gather in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on Wednesday for the first debate
of the presidential primary season, a milestone in any election campaign cycle,
the clear frontrunner in the opinion polls will be missing.
Republican
presidential candidate former Texas Rep. Will Hurd speaks at the Republican
Party of Iowa's 2023 Lincoln Dinner in Des Moines, Iowa, Friday, July 28, 2023.
(AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)
Donald
Trump, the former US president, has said he is unlikely to take part in the
debate hosted by the conservative Fox News network. It is speculated that he
could deploy “counter-programming” to steal the limelight and dominate the news
cycle.
That leaves
seven other candidates who have met the Republican National Committee’s polling
and donor requirements to qualify: Doug Burgum, Chris Christie, Ron DeSantis,
Nikki Haley, Mike Pence, Vivek Ramaswamy and Tim Scott. Political analysts
suggest that Trump will stay away because he has nothing to gain and everything
to lose.
“I don’t
think that he’ll show up to that debate because he’s scared to death of the
level of scrutiny that he would receive from someone like Chris Christie,” said
Tara Setmayer, a former Republican communications director on Capitol Hill.
“When you are that far ahead there’s no reason for you to step on to a debate
stage because the only thing that can happen is you run the greater risk of it
being a negative for you.”
Even in his
absence, Trump’s ever-mushrooming legal troubles are sure to loom over the
debate. The ex-president is facing 91 charges in four criminal cases –
indictments that have come to seem almost routine but are historically unique
in putting America’s electoral and judicial systems on collision course.
They’ve been scared to take him on directly. It is the
most bizarre campaign competition I’ve seen in my 30 years in politics
Tara Setmayer
Setmayer
noted: “None of the candidates other than Chris Christie and Asa Hutchinson –
who are polling at 2%, 1% in some places – are willing to take him on directly
about the indictments. They’ve been scared to take him on directly. It is the
most bizarre campaign competition I’ve ever seen in my 30 years in politics.”
The debate
will be moderated by the Fox News hosts Bret Baier and Martha MacCallum. In an
interview with the Politico website, Baier acknowledged that Trump will be
inescapable. He said: “If he’s not there, he’ll still be there. In other words,
he’ll be a part of questioning. There may be soundbites, there may be elements
where ‘this is what the leader of the primary says about this issue.’ He’ll be
there, even if he’s not there.”
Baier and
MacCallum are likely to cover a variety of topics, including abortion, the
economy and whether Trump should be pardoned for any federal crimes of which he
is convicted.
Setmayer
believes one question is fundamental. “Do you believe that Joe Biden is the
duly elected president of the United States and that the 2020 election was not
stolen? Any other answer than yes is inconsequential because if they don’t
believe in something as fundamental as our election system they’re disqualified
from the top.”
But so far
the Republican primary campaign has been notable for how few candidates have
been willing to denounce Trump over his attacks on democracy culminating in the
January 6 insurrection or other aspects of chaotic presidency.
This week
the New York Times reported on memos, commissioned by the pro-DeSantis spending
group Never Back Down, arguing that DeSantis should defend Trump at the debate
and go on the attack against campaign rival Ramaswamy.
Haley,
Ramaswamy and Scott have all been notably reluctant to condemn Trump on the
campaign trail. Pence, the former vice-president, has broken from his old boss
over his 2020 election lies but still insists that he was “proud” to serve in
the Trump-Pence administration.
Aaron Kall,
director of debate at the University of Michigan, said: “The catch-22 in these
debates is that even if Trump is not there as a frontrunner and there’s
technically an opportunity for others, if they’re forced into a bunch of
questions and their answers are basically defending Trump then it’s almost
impossible for them to make up any ground. They know that there’s a lot of base
support for Trump and they don’t want to alienate his voters and they likely
need his voters to win. It’s a real tough dilemma for these other candidates.”
Trump has
skipped crucial debates before. In early 2016 he boycotted a Republican primary
debate in Des Moines, Iowa, because of a dispute over the host Megyn Kelly. He
may have paid a price: four days later he lost to Ted Cruz in the Iowa caucuses
despite having led in the polls.
In the absence of the frontrunner then the number two
has the bullseye on their back. I think it’s going to be DeSantis
Aaron Kall
Perhaps no
one will be feeling the pressure more than DeSantis, the governor of Florida,
who is second behind Trump in most surveys and fired his campaign manager
earlier this month after underperforming expectations. His debating skills are
under scrutiny after he was caught flat-footed by his Democratic rival, Charlie
Crist, during his re-election campaign last year.
Kall
observed: “The best bet is in the absence of the frontrunner then the number
two becomes the frontrunner for the purpose of the debate and has the bullseye
on their back. I do think it’s going to be Governor DeSantis. Everyone else is
going to want to be him and present themselves as the most viable alternative
to Trump.”
In a
preview of a possible attack line, at least two candidates this week revived
DeSantis’s gaffe describing Ukraine’s war against Russian aggression as a
“territorial dispute”. Haley tweeted: “Too much is at stake to think the
Russian war is just a ‘territorial dispute’.” Christie wrote: “The war in
Ukraine is not a territorial dispute.”
Christie
memorably eviscerated Senator Marco Rubio in a 2016 primary debate by mocking
his rehearsed line repetition. Now he could have another Floridian in his
sights.
Chris
Christie meets Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy in Kyiv this month. The
former New Jersey governor revived a Ron DeSantis gaffe by stating: ‘The war in
Ukraine is not a territorial dispute.’
Chris
Christie meets Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy in Kyiv this month. The
former New Jersey governor revived a Ron DeSantis gaffe by stating: ‘The war in
Ukraine is not a territorial dispute.’ Photograph: Ukrainian Presidential Press
Service/Reuters
Kall added:
“Christie was an excellent attack dog in the last cycle. He may have
singlehandedly ended Rubio’s campaign. He was good at identifying some of the
verbal tics and things that maybe were a little bit too obvious and repetitive
in Marco Rubio’s debate strategy. But Christie in some ways last time proved an
enabler or helper for Donald Trump because he helped take out some of his main
competition.
“One of the
risks when you have a large field like that is the more candidates there are,
the more they could take each other out and then the person that ends up the
lone survivor is the one that started out with a big lead at the beginning. So
Trump benefits from people doing that.”
The one debate the rule that I would be counselling a
candidate on would be that if you’re not on offence, you’ve lost
Kevin Madden
Trump
dominated debates in 2016 with personal insults and name-calling. In theory,
his absence could prompt a return to civility and a more moderate tone
reminiscent of debates of the past.
Entrepreneur
Vivek Ramaswamy, a 38-year-old political novice, told reporters at the Iowa
State Fair last week: “I will be unafraid to draw policy contrasts but I’m not
personally attacking anybody in this race. Now, believe me, I’m somebody who
holds my ground … So if somebody’s going to come for me, come at your own
peril. But I’m not in this race to take somebody else down. I’m in this race to
lead us to our vision of what it means to be American.”
However,
the debate also offers candidates their last best chance to achieve a breakout
moment, close the gap on Trump and deliver a blow to their rivals. Christie,
DeSantis and others are unlikely to be pulling any punches in the
politics-as-bloodsport era of Trump.
Kevin
Madden, a senior strategist and spokesman on three presidential campaigns,
including Mitt Romney’s run in 2012, said: “The one debate the rule that I
would be counselling a candidate on if I was asked to prepare them right now
would be that if you’re not on offence in the debate, you’ve lost.
“It’s not a
time to pull out charts and start to go over the nuances or argue the details
of policy but instead it’s crystallise your message and draw a contrast with
your opponent and find a way to stand out. Find a way to create some
relatability and make a connection with the average voter out there who’s yet
to make up their mind or is about to hear from you for the first time. Make
your best first impression.”
Will some
of them be auditioning to be Trump’s running mate? Madden, a senior partner at
Penta, a stakeholder solutions firm, added: “If that is your approach then
you’ve already lost. If you’re worried about what Donald Trump’s going to think
about you, why are you even running?”
But perhaps
the bigger winner of the debate will be Joe Biden. The spectacle of Republicans
tearing into each other in a battleground state and struggling to emerge from
Trump’s shadow could play into Democrats’ hands. The party plans to coat
Milwaukee with ads listing Biden’s “record of accomplishments”, drive a
billboard truck circling the debate venue and launch its first advertising
campaign aimed at Black and Latino voters.
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