Joe Biden and Donald Trump exchanged heated barbs and attacked each other’s competence and credibility in a fiery first presidential debate 35 days ahead of the most tense US election in recent memory.
The two men erupted in contentious exchanges Tuesday night over the coronavirus pandemic, city violence, job losses and how the Supreme Court will shape the future of the nation’s health care.
In what was the most chaotic presidential debate in recent years, somehow fitting for what has been an extraordinarily ugly campaign, the two men frequently talked over each other with Trump interrupting, nearly shouting, so often that Biden eventually snapped at him, “Will you shut up, man?”
“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.”
If you’ve missed the action, here’s a quick recap of what some consider the most chaotic US presidential debate in recent history pic.twitter.com/DtyJfSuyo2
— TRT World Now (@TRTWorldNow) September 30, 2020
Competing for undecided voters
Trump and Biden arrived in Cleveland hoping the debate would energise their bases of support, even as they competed for the slim slice of undecided voters who could decide the election.
It has been generations since two men asked to lead a nation facing such tumult, with Americans both fearful and impatient about the coronavirus pandemic that has killed more than 200,000 of their fellow citizens and cost millions of jobs.
When put on the spot, President Trump refused to condemn white supremacist groups during the first US presidential #Debates2020 pic.twitter.com/zPZMVQvayJ
— TRT World Now (@TRTWorldNow) September 30, 2020
Control of the conversation
Over and over, Trump tried to control the conversation, interrupting Biden and repeatedly talking over the moderator, Chris Wallace of Fox News.
The president tried to deflect tough lines of questioning — whether on his taxes or the pandemic — to deliver broadsides against Biden.
The president drew a lecture from Wallace, who pleaded with both men to stop interrupting as the debate split-screen regularly showed the two candidates talking simultaneously.
“Please let the vice president talk,” Wallace admonished Trump during one of his interruptions.
Biden tried to push back against Trump, sometimes looking right at the camera to directly address viewers rather than the president and snapping, “It’s hard to get a word in with this clown.”
The effect was exhausting, for both viewers and for Wallace, who conceded at one point that he was having trouble following.
READ MORE: NYT report says Trump paid $750 in US income taxes in 2016, 2017
Under this president, we have become weaker, sicker, poorer, more divided, and more violent.
When I was vice president, we inherited a recession, I was asked to fix it, and I did.
We left Donald Trump a booming economy, and he caused a recession. pic.twitter.com/uEMPaTtZ7F
— Joe Biden (@JoeBiden) September 30, 2020
Condemning white supremacists?
But despite his efforts to dominate the discussion, Trump was frequently put on the defensive and tried to sidestep when he was asked if he was willing to condemn white supremacists and paramilitary groups.
“What do you want to call them? Give me a name. Give me a name,” Trump said, before Wallace mentioned the violent far-right group known as the Proud Boys. Trump then pointedly did not condemn the group, instead saying, “Proud Boys, stand back, stand by, but I’ll tell you what, somebody’s got to do something about Antifa and the left because this is not right-wing problem. This is a left-wing problem.”
A big takeaway from the first presidential debate: Trump once again refused to condemn white supremacists. Watch his answer when asked directly to do it: “Proud Boys, stand back and stand by.”
Key moments: https://t.co/xHL6RIHwFL pic.twitter.com/iK5L6WtaNy
— POLITICO (@politico) September 30, 2020
Handling of the pandemic
The vitriol exploded into the open when Biden attacked Trump’s handling of the pandemic, saying that the president “waited and waited” to act when the virus reached America’s shores and “still doesn’t have a plan.”
Biden told Trump to “get out of your bunker and get out of the sand trap” and go in his golf cart to the Oval Office to come up with a bipartisan plan to save lives.
Trump snarled a response, declaring that “I’ll tell you, Joe, you could never have done the job that we did. You don’t have it in your blood.”
“I know how to do the job,” was the solemn response from Biden, who served eight years as Barack Obama’s vice president.
The pandemic’s effects were in plain sight, with the candidates’ lecterns spaced far apart, all of the guests in the small crowd tested and the traditional opening handshake scrapped.
The men did not shake hands and, while neither candidate wore a mask to take the stage, their families did sport face coverings.
Watch: Joe Biden asks Donald Trump to “shut up” at first presidential debate #Debates2020 https://t.co/F6AdsKPU39 pic.twitter.com/VGm0kWGn9O
— TIME (@TIME) September 30, 2020
Supreme Court replacement
Trump struggled to define his ideas for replacing the Affordable Care Act on health care in the debate’s early moments and defended his nomination of Amy Coney Barrett, declaring that “I was not elected for three years, I’m elected for four years.”
“We won the election. Elections have consequences. We have the Senate. We have the White House and we have a phenomenal nominee, respected by all.”
Trump criticised Biden over the former vice president’s refusal to comment on whether he would try to expand the Supreme Court in retaliation if Barrett is confirmed to replace the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
READ MORE: Trump expected to pick Amy Coney Barrett for Supreme Court
Climate change and Paris accord
The president also refused anew to embrace the science of climate change.
When asked why he took steps like withdrawing the US from the landmark Paris climate pact, Trump reiterated his argument that such agreements were “driving energy prices through the sky.”
Nearly 200 nations signed the climate deal in which each country provides its own goals to curb emissions of heat-trapping gases that lead to climate change.
Biden said he would champion job-creating programmes that embrace green technologies and would rejoin the Paris accord, which is “all falling apart” without US involvement.
READ MORE: US President Trump dismisses climate change as cause of wildfires
Race division in the US
As the conversation moved to race, Biden accused Trump of walking away from the American promise of equity for all and making a race-based appeal.
“This is a president who has used everything as a dog whistle to try to generate racist hatred, racist division,” Biden said.
Recent months have seen major protests after the deaths of Black people at the hands of police. And Biden said there is systemic racist injustice in the US, and while the vast majority of police officers are “decent, honorable men and women” there are “bad apples” and people have to be held accountable.
Trump in turn claimed that Biden’s work on a federal crime bill treated the African American population “about as bad as anybody in this country.” The president pivoted to his hardline focus on those protesting racial injustice and accused Biden of being afraid to use the words “law and order” out of fear of alienating the left.
“Violence is never appropriate,” Biden said. “Peaceful protest is.”
READ MORE: Trump and Portland mayor trade blame over violence during protests
WALLACE: “Why did you decide to do that, to end racial sensitivity training — and do you believe that there is systemic racism in this country?”
TRUMP: “I ended it because it’s racist” #Debates2020 https://t.co/8XKphUeiZp pic.twitter.com/7aTovVh5pn
— Bloomberg (@business) September 30, 2020
Body language: louder than words
Trump scowled at his rival for much of the debate, or wagged his finger or waved his hand to dismiss Biden.
Biden, meanwhile, regularly gazed into the camera when Trump interrupted him to make a direct appeal to the American people.
Trump “doesn’t want to talk about what you need — you, the American people. It’s about you,” Biden said at one point.
While Trump spoke, Biden shook his head, sometimes broke into a smile or a laugh, and occasionally simply stopped speaking and kept silent in exasperation.
With just 35 days until the election, and early voting already underway in some states, Biden stepped onto the stage holding leads in the polls — significant in national surveys, close in some battleground states — and looking to expand his support among suburban voters, women and seniors. Surveys show the president has lost significant ground among those groups since 2016, but Biden faces his own questions encouraged by Trump’s withering attacks.
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