Thursday, September 12, 2024

Donald Trump looks delusional or otherwise mentally ill after claiming he won a debate that was so one-sided it prompted an ex-GOPer to say "she emasculated him"

(Getty)

 

Is Donald Trump delusional, in addition to whatever other mental-health conditions he might have? A reasonable person might ask that question after Trump announced that he would not participate in another debate with Kamala Harris because -- and get this -- he thinks he won Tuesday night's debate, and therefore, has no incentive to engage Harris on the debate stage again.

I've given the Web a pretty good scouring the last 2-3 days, and I haven't been able to find any legitimate, objective news source who says Trump won Tuesday night's debate. For that matter, I haven't found any regular social-media mavens who seem to think Trump was the winner. As you might expect from Trump supporters, a few MAGA types have claimed their orange hero got a raw deal regarding fact-checking  from the ABC moderators. But that's about it so far. The Web is a big place, so it's possible I might have missed something. But for now, I haven't found any evidence that even Trump's most ardent supporters believe he won the debate. If Trump is so delusional or brazenly dishonest that he would try to claim victory in a debate he lost by a wide margin, what does that say about his character? What else might he try to claim as his own when the physical item or achievement belongs to someone else? Wouldn't this be outright theft or its civil equivalent?

Since Trump is an adjudicated rapist and a convicted felon awaiting sentencing -- which could include jail or prison -- can we trust anything he says or does? My answer is "No, we can't." Does that make him unfit to serve as president? My answer is "Yes, it does." More than 200 Republicans, including former members of Trump's White House staff, feel the same way and have publicly stated that they can longer support Trump and have vowed to vote for Harris

What possibly could make Trump think he won Tuesday night's debate? I can think of only one answer: Something is seriously wrong with the wiring in the guy's brain. That probably has been the case for months, maybe years, and it should be clear to almost all voting-age U.S. adults that Trump should never again be anywhere near the seat of power in the world's greatest democracy (which he wants to turn into an authoritarian regime, by the way.)

Here's a suggestion for anyone who doubts that: Between now and election Day (Nov. 5), I urge you to read as many books by Mary Trump, Donald's niece, a writer, and clinical psychologist -- who is strongly opposed to his efforts to return to the White House. I think it is safe to say no human being knows Donald Trump the way Mary Trump knows him, with the professional expertise and the personal background to understand the family dysfunction that produced him. Following is a list of  Mary Trump's  books. Together, they provide a load of insights about the man who wants to be our next president:

(1) Too Much and Never Enough: How My Family Created the World's Most Dangerous Man (Simon & Schuster, 2020). (This memoir rose to No. 1 on Amazon's bestsellers list, selling 1.35 million copies in its first week of release).

(2) The Reckoning: Our Nation's Trauma and Finding a Way to Heal (St. Martin's Press,  2021). 

(3)  Who Could Ever Love You? A Family Memoir (St. Martin's Press, 2024)

Is Donald Trump afraid to debate Kamala Harris? That's how it looks from here.That's also how it looks to Mike Madrid, a former Republican whose debate reaction is covered in a Raw Story/BuzzFeed piece under the headline "Soooo, Donald Trump Shared Exactly Why He Doesn't Want To Debate Kamala Harris Again, And It's Quite The Statement" A separate Raw Story piece is under the headline "'She emasculated him': Ex-senior Republican says Harris left Trump 'embarrassed'." The following is from the two stories, which are the same, just published in two different places:

While we're all still reeling from Tuesday's historic and chaotic presidential debate between former president Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris, the two candidates have since shared their thoughts on a second match.

Previously, Trump agreed to debate his former race counterpart, President Joe Biden, twice ahead of the election. However, after debating Harris, the same cannot be said.

"Under the bright lights, the American people got to see the choice they will face this fall at the ballot box: between moving forward with Kamala Harris, or going backwards with Trump,” Jen O’Malley Dillon, Harris's campaign chair, said. “That’s what they saw tonight and what they should see at a second debate in October. Vice President Harris is ready for a second debate. Is Donald Trump?”

However, in a phone call with Fox News, Trump said, “When a fighter loses they say, ‘I want a rematch.'"

“I won the debate. I don’t know that I want to do another debate.”

Doubling down, he finished, "I’d be less inclined to because we had a great night."

Elsewhere, he repeated this sentiment in an interview with ABC News, saying, "Well she wants a second debate because she lost tonight, very badly."

Trump apparently said all that with a straight face. But it probably caused many political observers to convulse with laughter. In fact, one news site  already has said Trump emerged from the Harris debate as a "laughing stock." Does Trump's assessment have any connection to reality? Not according to the BuzzFeed/Yahoo! report:

According to CNN polling, debate viewers say Harris won the match 63% to 37%. (And that probably is being generous to Trump.)

But of course, the most important poll will always be the actual Election Day results.

Donald Trump's fragile ego lies bleeding on the debate-stage floor after Kamala Harris used smarts, patience, and tactics to leave him (and his campaign?) in a heap

Donald Trump and Kamala Harris go face-to face in debate (AP)
 

Kamala Harris has a history as a strong debater, and it served her well at a big moment, as she got off to a quick start and steamrolled Donald Trump in Tuesday night's presidential debate in Philadelphia. The result was so one-sided that a TIME magazine r4porter said, "It didn't feel like much of a fair fight.

How did Harris manage to take control early and keep it for almost the entire evening. David Leonhardt and Ian Prasad provide an analytical piece at The New York Times Morning newsletter. It gives the impression that Trump should have spent more time on rigorous preparation because Harris was ready, and she essentially jabbed and attacked Trump's fragile ego enough that he wound up beating himself. Here is how Jim Geraghty, of the iconic conservative magazine National Review, put it under the headline "Trump’s Biggest Problem at the Debate . . . Was Trump":

This morning, a whole lot of people in right-world want to argue that last night’s debate didn’t go as well as it should have for Donald Trump, because the moderators were unfair in their questioning and challenging of Trump’s assertions while giving Kamala Harris a pass. Eh, the biggest problem for Trump last night was Trump.

I find myself genuinely curious to see if the poll numbers shift at all in the coming weeks. On paper, Kamala Harris’s campaign got exactly what it wanted. She appeared poised, calm, cool, collected — the experienced prosecutor. Trump was a teapot boiling over — fuming, scowling, and shouting through most of the night.

So — again on paper — Trump was terrible, and you would think his poll numbers, nationwide and in the swing states, would nosedive. But what we saw Tuesday night wasn’t all that different from the same Trump we’ve seen year after year. And remember when Trump’s conviction was supposed to be a game-changer? The numbers barely budged.

Trump isn’t neck-and-neck in this race because Americans are charmed by his personality. He’s neck-and-neck in this race because of the national exhaustion with the Biden administration status quo, and frustration with inflation and the high cost of living, an insecure southern border, and a sense of growing chaos overseas. So, yes, in theory, this should have been a Harris knockout blow. But if this sort of contrast works, and one sort of performance is so much better than the other . . . why is Trump still so close to reaching 270 or more electoral votes?

Buckle up. This is a long one.

The ‘Illegal Aliens Are Eating Our Pets’ Debate

Yes, you can make fair gripes about ABC News moderators David Muir and Linsey Davis. Harris’s favorite topic, abortion, came up early when the audience was most tuned-in. But in the end, it was Trump’s job to go up there and make the best case for his election that he possibly could with the time he had — and instead he turned in a temper tantrum of a performance, taking the bait that Harris laid out every single time. . . . 

There were some tough questions in there for Harris on the state of the economy, on flip-flopping, and on Afghanistan. And every Republican presidential candidate should expect tougher questions the moment he steps on a debate stage. We’ve lived through Gwen Ifill moderating a debate with then-senator Obama, after signing a deal to write a book about him. We’ve lived through CNN’s Candy Crowley incorrectly “correcting” Mitt Romney. We’ve lived through George Stephanopoulos asking about a nonexistent Republican intent to ban birth control.

If Trump is giving a nomination-acceptance speech, he’ll ramble about the Green Bay Packers, how much money Kid Rock makes, and the time he saw Hulk Hogan “lift a 350-pound man over his shoulders and then bench press him two rows into the audience,” and nickname CBS News’ morning show “Deface the Nation.”

There were some tough questions for Harris -- on the state of the economy, on flip-flopping, and on Afghanistan. And every Republican presidential candidate should expect tougher questions the moment he steps on a debate stage. We’ve lived through Gwen Ifill moderating a debate with then-senator Obama, after signing a deal to write a book about him. We’ve lived through CNN’s Candy Crowley incorrectly “correcting” Mitt Romney. We’ve lived through George Stephanopoulos asking about a nonexistent Republican intent to ban birth control.

No, in the end, the problem is that every single time, Donald Trump talks about what he wants to talk about — whether or not it’s in his interest, whether or not it’s in his party’s interest, and whether or not it is what the moment requires.

If he’s up on stage for what is likely his only debate against his current opponent, he’ll say that he doesn’t get enough credit for urging the crowd on January 6 to be “peaceful and patriotic,” that he regrets nothing he said or did that day, and that those who have been prosecuted for crimes committed on January 6 “have been treated so badly,” and he’ll cite Sean Hannity and Laura Ingraham as reporters who verify his version of events, and he’ll quote Hungary’s Viktor Orbán as evidence that he’s respected on the world stage. He’ll insist the 2020 election was stolen: “I’ll show you Georgia and I’ll show you Wisconsin and I’ll show you Pennsylvania and I’ll show you — we have so many facts and statistics.”

And he’ll contend that Americans’ pets in Springfield, Ohio are being eaten by migrants.

“A lot of towns don’t want to talk about it because they’re so embarrassed by it. In Springfield, they’re eating the dogs. The people that came in. 

Geraghty appears to see Trump as an unserious candidate, who took an unserious approach to last night's debate -- and it cost him, and his party. As for analysis of the debate itself, let's' turn back to The New York Times, where David Leonhardt and Ian Prasad write:

Debating has long been a Kamala Harris strength. It resembles courtroom argument, a core part of her career as a prosecutor. A debate helped her win her first statewide race in California, 14 years ago. In her only vice-presidential debate four years ago with Mike Pence, polls showed that she won.

And she certainly seemed to win last night’s debate with Donald Trump.

She was calm and forceful and repeatedly baited Trump into looking angry. As Trump told lies — about Obamacare, inflation, crime, immigrants eating household pets and more — she smiled, shook her head and then called him on the lies. She often looked directly at him or the camera; he seemed unwilling to look at her and looked mostly at the moderators.

During the debate, prediction markets shifted a few points toward Harris. Many political analysts, including conservatives, also judged Harris to be the winner — two-and-a-half months after many of those same analysts said Trump had trounced President Biden in their debate:

  • Y’all, this is not going well for Trump. Don’t get mad at me for saying so,” Erick Erickson, the conservative commentator, wrote on social media. He also accusing the moderators of being biased against Trump — a common Republican argument last night. (The Times’s media correspondent analyzed the moderators’ performance.)
  • “I think she’s winning this. She comes across as normal, clear, and strong. Trump can’t land a blow — he is blustering and unfocused,” Rod Dreher, the Christian conservative, wrote.
  • “Trump looked old tonight,” Chris Wallace, the longtime Fox News host who now works for CNN, said.
  • At least one person who isn’t a political analyst also seemed influenced by the night. “Like many of you, I watched the debate tonight,” Taylor Swift wrote on social media afterward. “I will be casting my vote for Kamala Harris and Tim Walz.”

Will it matter?

There are a couple of important caveats.

First, Harris didn’t have a perfect night. She often ignored the questions from ABC’s moderators — like the opening question about whether Americans are better off than four years ago, as well as questions about her changed positions on fracking and other subjects. She recited her talking points instead.

She made a few false or misleading statements (though many fewer than Trump), including about the unemployment rate when he left office. She described her policies in ways that weren’t always easy to understand. In Trump’s closing statement, he parried her many promises by pointing out that she has been vice president for three-and-a-half years and asked, “Why hasn’t she done it?”

Second, it is uncertain how much Harris’s strong overall performance will matter. “Hillary Clinton also won the debates against Donald Trump,” Julia Ioffe of Puck News noted. The same prediction markets that shifted toward Harris last night continue to show the election as a tossup. The debate’s impact will become more evident as new polls emerge in coming days. But Harris’s campaign seemed very pleased with how last night went.

More on tactics

  • Body language spoke loudly. The debate began with a handshake (Harris walked over and introduced herself to Trump, as they had never met in person). Later, she used her expressions to signal her distaste.
  • Many of Harris’s answers seemed aimed at Trump’s ego. She mocked his rallies as boring, and said that world leaders laughed at him and that he was “fired by 81 million people.” Trump at times appeared scattered and shouted into his microphone.
  • Trump spoke longer than Harris did overall, but Harris spent more time attacking Trump, as these charts show.
  • Harris’s campaign immediately challenged Trump to a second debate. Trump said he’d “have to think about it.”

More on issues

  • Abortion: Trump defended the overturning of Roe v. Wade and declined to say whether he would veto a national abortion ban. Harris deftly attacked Trump’s stance, but she declined to say whether she supported restrictions on abortion in the third trimester. (The Times’s Jonathan Swan noted, “Trump has made clear to advisers that he believes the abortion issue alone could cost him the election.”)
  • Threats to democracy: Trump refused to acknowledge that he lost the 2020 election and falsely claimed he had “nothing to do with” the Jan. 6 Capitol attack, blaming Nancy Pelosi.
  • Immigration: Trump repeatedly pivoted to discuss immigration, where polls favor him. Harris countered that Trump pushed Republicans to kill a bipartisan border-security bill, saying he “would prefer to run on a problem instead of fixing a problem.”
  • Ukraine: Trump wouldn’t say whether he wanted Ukraine to win the war with Russia. Harris said that Vladimir Putin would be “sitting in Kyiv” if Trump were president.
  • Health care: Asked if he had a plan to repeal and replace Obamacare, which he has promised for years, Trump said he had “concepts of a plan.”
  • Biden’s record: Harris largely deflected Trump’s efforts to link her to Biden, calling herself “a new generation of leadership.” But she defended Biden’s decision to withdraw from Afghanistan and much of his administration’s work.
  • Here are the night’s best, worst and most surprising lines and six takeaways.

Commentary

  • “Everything seemed to unfold on her terms, not his,” The Times Opinion columnist Lydia Polgreen argued. Here’s what otherOpinion writers thought about the debate.
  • The political consultant Frank Luntz praised the debate moderators, ABC’s David Muir and Linsey Davis, for “covering a wider range of topics than most debates. Perhaps it was because they knew this might be the only debate of this election cycle.”
  • ABC News was the “biggest loser” of the night and the moderators “embarrassed themselves” by only fact-checking Trump, Liz Peek wrote at Fox News.
  • “Trump has done nothing to capitalize on the fact that one-third of voters nationally (more in the swing states) feel like they don’t know enough about Harris. He is not defining her. He’s taking her bait,” National Review’s Noah Rothman wrote.
  • Late night hosts joked about the debate. “Harris got under his skin like she was stuffing in butter and rosemary. It was beautiful,” Stephen Colbert said.

Wednesday, September 11, 2024

Borrowing from Muhammad Ali's "Rope-A-Dope" tactic of the 1970s, Kamala Harris allowed Donald Trump to hang himself, and the media said it produced a one-sided debate that went heavily in Harris' favor

Kamala Harris offers a handshake before taking Trump apart in debate (AP)
 

Kamala Harris got last night's presidential debate off to a relatively genial start by offering a handshake to Donald Trump, who appeared to rarely even look at Harris. Shortly after the pleasantries were over, Harris got off to a quick start, putting Trump on the defensive and keeping him there for most of the evening. That gave Harris the upper hand in what might be the candidates' only debate -- although the Harris camp said later they were up for a second debate. No wonder they were feeling confident;  moments after controlling Trump -- whose debate style might best be described as "lies, insults, and more lies" -- they received an endorsement from pop star Taylor Swift, and her fan base of "Swifties" -- who, according to one report, number about 58.23 million adults in the United States

While the consensus of news sites is that Trump was soundly beaten in last night's debate, his biggest concern going forward might be Taylor Swift and her massive and enthusiastic base of fans.

As for mainstream -media opinion, Trump took a well-rounded thumping from Harris.  Here is how TIME magazine put it under the headline "Trump Spent the Debate Walking Into Traps Harris Laid For Him": 

A poised and prepared Kamala Harris met a crabby and thin-skinned Donald Trump in a presidential debate, and it didn’t feel like much of a fair fight.

Over the course of almost two hours Tuesday night, the Vice President effectively needled the former President on his deepest insecurities while painting a clear choice for voters. Trump in response repeatedly took the bait and doubled down, leading him to go on wild tangents, engage in angry outbursts, and relitigate old battles. It was a striking dichotomy for voters to take in from two figures who share so little when it comes to political instinct, personalities, and even personal discipline. Harris leveraged Trump’s total lack of that last element to set the agenda for the evening.

While Trump spoke dismissively of Harris, she systematically dismantled his rhetoric. Trump invoked Fox personalities Laura Ingraham and Sean Hannity as validators for his claims and she cited Nobel-winning economists. Trump admiringly invoked autocrats and Harris noted a raft of former Trump staffers who say they will be voting for her.

It was a snapshot of a bitter race that remains a jump ball with less than two months before Election Day. And it was the first time since Trump launched his first campaign in 2015 that he found himself on a debate stage against someone who matched him on political showmanship.

“What we have in the former President is someone who would prefer to run on a problem instead of fixing a problem,” Harris said, summing up the thesis of her campaign.

It was clear even before the debate ended that the balance of this election cycle will be spent trying to rev the engines of each political camp. Harris in many ways is picking up where Biden’s 2020 campaign left off in a pitch for normalcy and decency, but with a polish that gives Democrats fresh loads of optimism. Where Trump advisers saw opportunities to drag down Harris by tying her to all of Biden’s record, the candidate only intermittently kept up the strategy. Instead, Trump kept his focus on his own political record, aiming largely for the audience that takes their cues from right-wing sources and shares his belief that he should still be in the White House.

Put plainly, Harris made a very clear argument for the nation to move forward with a new generation of leadership while Trump continued to linger in his previous elections. Some of her answers didn’t exactly match the question asked, but at no point did her statements devolve into ad hominem attacks and easily fact-checked falsehoods.

“Donald Trump was fired by 81 million people. So let’s be clear about that and clearly he is having a very difficult time processing that,” Harris said, one of her many tweaks aimed squarely at his ego.

Trump could not help himself, pivoting to his assertion without evidence that there remains enmity between Biden and Harris: “I’ll give you a little secret. He can’t stand her. He hates her.” Later in the evening, Trump even questioned if Biden still had the job and suggested Harris and her rhetoric were responsible for political violence aimed at him.

“I probably took a bullet to the head because of the things they say about me,” Trump said, invoking the failed assassination attempt against him.

But for every moment that aimed at the handful of voters who are unsure about their choice this fall—who to vote for, or even whether to cast ballots—he took many more detours that most clearly targeted his die-hard supporters and his individual ego. For instance, in a bizarre moment that has been debunked widely, Trump wrongly said Haitian immigrants in Ohio are hunting dogs and cats for food.

“They’re eating the pets of the people that live there,” Trump said as a puzzled Harris did little to hide her disbelief. Confronted by anchor David Muir that there is no evidence of that, Trump, naturally, doubled down.

Similarly, Trump demanded he was correct in inflating the number of migrants in the country without legal status, that the FBI cooked the books on crime stats, international monitors were lying about the death toll in Ukraine, and government economists manufactured the number of new jobs created on the watch of Biden and Harris.

Understanding Trump’s unique vulnerabilities, Harris consistently threaded the needle to derail Trump, who never seemed to catch onto the transparent trickery.

“People start leaving his rallies early out of exhaustion and boredom,” Harris said of her rival. 

It’s a bait Trump always takes. “People don’t go to her rallies. The people who do go, she’s bussing them in and paying them to be there, showing them in a different light,” Trump said.

In the end, TIME concluded that Harris outsmarted Trump -- essentially giving him rope to hang himself, much as Muhammad Ali did to George Foreman in a 1974 heavyweight championship boxing match, long famous for Ali's use of the "Rope-A-Dope" tactic. In last night's debate the "dope" was Donald Trump.

Harris had to love reading that, just as she surely loved a separate TIME article under the headline "Kamala Harris dominates Donald Trump."

On top of that, Harris got these kind words from Taylor Swift, as reported by NPR:

Taylor Swift is entering her 2024 election era.

The mega pop star has thrown her support behind Vice President Harris, just under two months out from the election.

"I think she is a steady-handed, gifted leader and I believe we can accomplish so much more in this country if we are led by calm and not chaos," she wrote in a post to her more than 280 million followers on Instagram.

Swift said she was alarmed by Trump posting recent AI pictures on social media, falsely showing her endorsing him, and wanted to combat misinformation with the truth.

The pop star began publicly weighing in on politics ahead of the 2018 midterms, has a record of boosting civic participation by discussing politics online. Her past endorsements and statements, though infrequent, have prompted tens of thousands of people to register to vote.

Swift signed her post "Childless Cat Lady." 

More insights on last night's debate came from a joint ABC News/Yahoo! report, featuring two experts, on political debate and race:

As the two presidential candidates entered the debate stage, Kamala Harris strode across it and offered her hand to Donald Trump to shake, setting a confident tone that didn’t flag throughout the debate.

Trump, appearing to grow angrier through the night, stuck to his well-trodden themes of American decline and reminded viewers that Harris was part of the Biden administration, which he blamed for that decline.

Each candidate probably won points with their supporters – whether they won over undecided voters will become clear when the ballots are counted. The Conversation U.S. asked two scholars, Miami University sociologist Rodney Coates, an expert on race, and Lee Banville, a 13-year veteran of the PBS NewsHour and now director of the School of Journalism at the University of Montana who has written a book on presidential debates, to respond to what they heard in the debate.

‘The American people want better’

Rodney Coates, Professor of Critical Race and Ethnic Studies, Miami University

From the very opening of the presidential debate, Kamala Harris made clear her vision of a more just society while at the same time directly challenging Donald Trump’s controversial views on abortion, immigration and the U.S. legal system.

I’m about lifting people up and not beating people down,” Harris said.

A former prosecutor, Harris repeatedly used Trump’s own words and past behavior to attack his chaotic first administration. In response, Trump resorted to personal attacks, calling Harris “the worst vice president in the history of our country,” and said she had no ideas except for those of her boss, President Joe Biden.

But after listening to Trump’s frequent personal attacks against Biden, Harris finally snapped. “You are not running against Joe Biden,” Harris said. “You are running against me.”

Noticeably absent from Trump’s first face-to-face meeting with Harris were his racist attacks against her. Since Biden dropped out of the race in July 2024 and Harris became the Democratic nominee, Trump has described Harris as having “a low IQ,” “dumb as a rock,” “weak” and “lazy.”

For most of the debate, Trump avoided this line of attack, but he could not avoid repeating a debunked myth that Haitian immigrants in Ohio were killing and eating pets. But when asked about Harris’ racial identity, Trump said he didn’t care what she was.

“I read where she is not Black … then I read that she was Black,” Trump said. “That’s up to her.”

Critics have accused Trump of putting racist attacks at the center of his campaign strategy.

But Harris said there was no place for such a racially divisive strategy.

“It’s a tragedy,” Harris said. Trump, she said, “has consistently over the course of his career attempted to use race to divide the American people. … I think the American people want better than that.”

As the two presidential candidates entered the debate stage, Kamala Harris strode across it and offered her hand to Donald Trump to shake, setting a confident tone that didn’t flag throughout the debate.

Trump, appearing to grow angrier through the night, stuck to his well-trodden themes of American decline and reminded viewers that Harris was part of the Biden administration, which he blamed for that decline.

Each candidate probably won points with their supporters – whether they won over undecided voters will become clear when the ballots are counted. The Conversation U.S. asked two scholars, Miami University sociologist Rodney Coates, an expert on race, and Lee Banville, a 13-year veteran of the PBS NewsHour and now director of the School of Journalism at the University of Montana who has written a book on presidential debates, to respond to what they heard in the debate.

‘What people wanted’

Lee Banville, Professor and Director of the School of Journalism, University of Montana

Often these spectacles of American politics come down to some memorable moment – a rhetorical jab that bloodies an opponent, an unforced error that dogs a campaign for weeks. The first 30 minutes of Biden’s performance in his June debate with Trump is just the latest in a long line of pivotal moments that can throw a campaign off.

But when does a fumbled phrase elevate into a political crisis or a factual slip turn into lost votes? And what from tonight’s historic encounter will merit more than a couple of TikToks making fun of politicians?

We should know in the next day or so, but one may be when Trump claimed that ending the constitutional protection for abortion in Roe v. Wade had returned the issue to the states – a move, he said, “Every legal scholar, every Democrat, every Republican, liberal, conservative, they all wanted this issue to be brought back to the states where the people could vote. And that’s what happened.”

Harris then turned that phrase “what people wanted” back on the former president.

“You want to talk about this is what people wanted? Pregnant women who want to carry a pregnancy to term suffering from a miscarriage, being denied care in an emergency room because the health care providers are afraid they might go to jail and she’s bleeding out in a car in the parking lot? She didn’t want that. Her husband didn’t want that. A 12- or 13-year-old survivor of incest being forced to carry a pregnancy to term? They don’t want that,” Harris said.

It was a moment of policy, but also a personal moment, and hit on a major theme of the race. That is the kind of moment we have seen stand out in the past: President Gerald Ford wrongly declaring Eastern Europe free of Soviet domination; President Ronald Reagan deftly dispatching concerns about his age with a well-placed quip about the youth and inexperience of his 56-year-old rival; President George H.W. Bush looking at his watch repeatedly during a 1992 town hall debate.

I was lucky enough to work on a 2008 documentary – Debating our Destiny – where the moderator of 12 presidential debates and my former boss, the late Jim Lehrer, interviewed many of those candidates about debates. The first President Bush was one of our favorites.

“You look at your watch and they say that he shouldn’t had any business running for president. He’s bored. He’s out of this thing, he’s not with it and we need change,” Bush told us later. “Now, was I glad when the damn thing was over. Yeah. And maybe that’s why I was looking at it, only 10 more minutes of this crap.”

Now, Bush might have been the funny one, but it was former President Bill Clinton who, after mulling it over, offered insight into why some debate moments stick: “The reason the watch thing hurt so badly was it tended to reinforce the problem he had in the election.”

Put another way, stories and moments that reaffirm a theme in the campaign that already is present in the minds of voters often resonate long after the lights dim.

So, now Americans will sit back and see what the echo chambers and cable outlets make of an exchange like the one on abortion. Will it fire up more women voters to back the Harris ticket or will it be lost in a sea of economic issues and immigration policy?

If Bill Clinton is right, the abortion back-and-forth will probably resonate if it connects to what voters already think about these candidates and what are the primary issues of this campaign.

This article is republished from The Conversation, a nonprofit, independent news organization bringing you facts and trustworthy analysis to help you make sense of our complex world. It was written by: Rodney Coates, Miami University and Lee Banville, University of Montana

Tuesday, September 10, 2024

With Kamala Harris' methodical preparation style vs. Trump's more casual approach, the No. 1 event left on the campaign trail launches tonight in Philadelphia

Harris vs. Trump: Debate Night (Rolling Stone)

The 2024 presidential election is 56 days away, and the most important event on a dwindling campaign calendar comes tonight when Kamala Harris and Donald Trump square off in what likely will be their only debate. What has been going on behind the scenes as the big night approaches? The New York Times, at its Evening newletter, provides insights from both sides. Matthew Culin writes:

Vice President Kamala Harris has spent much of the past several days holed up in a Pittsburgh hotel, practicing for her debate tonight against Donald Trump. There’s a stage, replica TV lighting and an adviser acting as Trump.

Trump has opted for a much more casual debate prep, with his advisers urging him to avoid looking like a bully. One of the key questions going into the event is whether Trump can restrain himself despite his history of being physically and rhetorically hostile to women on the debate stage.

The clash will be especially important for Harris, who began her campaign for president less than two months ago. A recent Times poll found that she was narrowly trailing Trump nationwide in part because nearly a third of voters said that they needed to learn more about her.

The debate will also be a test of Harris’s carefully rehearsed, aggressive debate style. “When Harris has not methodically prepared, she sometimes has trouble,” our politics reporter Lisa Lerer said. “That could end up being a problem with Trump because he is, above all other things, a highly unpredictable debater.”

Here’s what else to know:

Your questions:

We’re asking readers what they’d like to know about the election and taking those questions to our reporters. We gave one to Edward Wong, who covers foreign policy.

“Europe is watching. How come the candidates don’t talk about the global view on America and the necessity to reconnect to allies?” — Yasha Young, Berlin

Edward: Most American voters do not see foreign policy as a decisive issue or a priority in U.S. elections, unless American troops are directly involved in a disastrous war, so candidates generally do not spend much time talking about U.S. alliances or global affairs. However, we might see journalists ask both Harris and Trump questions about their foreign policy views in the televised debate on Tuesday.