Trump-Biden debate: what rules did they accept to avoid fistfights?

Trump-Biden debate: what rules did they accept to avoid fistfights?
Trump-Biden debate: what rules did they accept to avoid fistfights?

Invectives, taunts and an outgoing president, Donald Trump, constantly interrupting his challenger Joe Biden, who ended up saying “Are you going to shut up, man? »: this Thursday evening, CNN hopes to avoid the cacophony which dominated the first televised duel of the previous presidential election. To achieve this, the debate will take place without an audience, in the channel’s studios in Atlanta, from 9 p.m. this Thursday (3 a.m. Paris time). Above all, Joe Biden’s microphone will be cut off when Donald Trump speaks and vice versa.

CNN has also assured that its two moderators, Jake Tapper and Dana Bash, figures of the channel, “will use all the tools at their disposal to enforce speaking times and ensure a civilized debate”.

Joe Biden won a coin toss allowing him to choose which side he would stand on the stage or whether he wanted to speak first or second during closing statements. He decided to stand on the right on the screen, leaving the choice to Donald Trump to intervene last and close the debate.

The danger is that instead of informing, a debate could multiply inaccurate information

  • 3 No live fact-check

    CNN has not indicated what topics will be covered and does not plan a real-time fact check. “One of the problems of a debate with Donald Trump”, who repeats, for example, without proof that the 2020 election was stolen from him, “is that the moderators cannot check the facts in real time and it is better not, it would be very risky and it would disrupt the debate,” underlines Kathleen Hall Jamieson, professor of communications at the University of Pennsylvania. “The danger is that instead of informing, a debate could multiply inaccurate information,” she adds.

    Joe Biden and Donald Trump will have neither teleprompters nor small prepared cards, but will be provided with something to take notes. And they won’t be able to speak with their teams during the two commercial breaks.

  • 4 CNN diffuse, Fox News aussi

    Both candidates turned their backs on the Commission on Presidential Debates, an independent body, to rely on CNN. Faced with the challenge of public service, the Warner Bros. group channel. Discovery nevertheless authorized its rivals to broadcast simultaneously, with a CNN logo and without external comments.

    This means that Fox News regulars will be able to stay on their favorite channel, which plans to go on air two hours before the debate, with its editorialists Jesse Watters or Sean Hannity, who regularly attack CNN, deemed “anti- Trump.” The second has already described Jake Tapper as a “radical left activist who hides behind the mask of a journalist”.

  • 5 What audience, what impact?

    An essential, but not necessarily decisive, event in an American presidential campaign, the debate is massively followed: 84 million viewers for the first duel between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump, a record; 73 million for the first Biden-Trump debate in 2020.

    But this is the first time that a debate has been organized so early, more than four months before the election and even though the candidates have not been officially nominated by their parties. “The risk is that the American public doesn’t pay much attention to the news in the summer,” notes Kathleen Hall Jamieson. “Typically, presidential debates do not affect a sufficient number of votes to decide the outcome of an election. But when a vote is close, as is the case this time, they can play an important role,” she concludes.

A second debate is planned on ABC on September 10, two months before the election.

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