Presidential debates, 2020

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2020 Presidential Election
Date: November 3, 2020

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The Commission on Presidential Debates held two presidential debates and one vice presidential debate in 2020.

The first presidential debate took place in Cleveland, Ohio, on September 29, 2020. Case Western Reserve University and Cleveland Clinic co-hosted the event. Fox News' Chris Wallace moderated.

On October 9, 2020, the commission canceled a planned second debate between President Donald Trump (R) and former Vice President Joe Biden (D). The event had been scheduled for October 15, 2020.[1] Click here to learn more about the disagreement between the commission and campaigns over the format and timeline of the debate.

The final presidential debate took place in Nashville, Tennessee, on October 22, 2020, at Belmont University. NBC News' Kristen Welker was the moderator.

The only vice presidential debate took place on October 7, 2020, at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City, Utah. USA Today's Susan Page moderated the event.

During the primary election, the Democratic National Committee (DNC) also held 11 presidential debates between June 2019 and March 2020. Click here for more information about the Democratic primary debates.

General election debates

See also: Presidential debates, 2020

The following table provides an overview of the date, location, and host in each scheduled 2020 general election debate.

2020 general election debates
Debate Date Location Host
First presidential debate September 29, 2020 Cleveland, Ohio Case Western Reserve University and Cleveland Clinic
Vice presidential debate October 7, 2020 Salt Lake City, Utah University of Utah
Second presidential debate Canceled
October 15, 2020
Miami, Florida Adrienne Arsht Center
Third presidential debate October 22, 2020 Nashville, Tennessee Belmont University


Presidential debate on October 22, 2020

See also: Presidential debate (October 22, 2020)

The Commission on Presidential Debates held the final presidential debate on October 22, 2020, between President Donald Trump (R) and former Vice President Joe Biden (D).

The debate was 90 minutes without commercial breaks. It was divided into six, 15-minute segments on the following topics selected by moderator, NBC News' Kristen Welker.[2][3]

  • Fighting COVID-19
  • American families
  • Race in America
  • Climate change
  • National security
  • Leadership

The commission announced on October 19 that each candidate's microphone would be muted during the other candidate's two-minute opening remarks for each of the six segments. During the rest of the debate, the microphones would be on for open discussion. Both campaigns agreed to the rule.[4][5]

To qualify, a candidate had to meet certain constitutional, ballot access, and polling requirements. Click here to learn more about them.


Joe Biden (D)

Donald Trump (R)


HIGHLIGHTS
  • Date: October 22, 2020, at 9:00 p.m. ET
  • Venue: Belmont University
  • Moderator: Kristen Welker

  • Video and transcript

    By the numbers

    Candidate highlights

    The candidates discussed the coronavirus pandemic, election interference, foreign conflicts of interest, China, North Korea, healthcare, economic stimulus, immigration, race, and climate change.

    This section includes highlights for each presidential candidate. The following paraphrased statements were compiled from the transcript of the debate.

    Joe Biden said Trump did not take responsibility for the 220,000 deaths caused by the coronavirus in the United States or have a plan to safely reopen the economy and schools. He said his healthcare plan, Bidencare, would be Obamacare with a public option. Biden said Trump’s family separation policy violated the nation’s values. Biden called climate change an existential threat. He said the country needed to transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy over time.


    Donald Trump said a coronavirus vaccine would be available sooner than what his officials projected. He said schools and businesses needed to reopen. Trump said Biden failed to address immigration and criminal justice reform while he was vice president. He also said that Biden and his family received money from foreign countries. Trump said his tax and regulatory policy would help rebuild the economy. He said success would unify the country.

    Vice presidential debate on October 7, 2020

    See also: Vice presidential debate (October 7, 2020)

    The Commission on Presidential Debates held a vice presidential debate on October 7, 2020, between Vice President Mike Pence (R) and Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif).

    The debate was 90 minutes long and divided into 10-minute segments. USA Today's Susan Page moderated the debate.[6] Harris and Pence discussed the coronavirus pandemic, economy, climate change, China, foreign policy, abortion, healthcare, race, and the election. Click here for highlights from each candidate.


    Kamala Harris (D)

    Mike Pence (R)


    To qualify, a candidate had to meet certain constitutional, ballot access, and polling requirements. Click here to learn more about them.

    HIGHLIGHTS
  • Date: October 7, 2020, at 9:00 p.m. ET
  • Venue: University of Utah
  • Moderator: Susan Page
  • Video and transcript

    By the numbers

    Candidate highlights

    This section includes highlights for each vice presidential candidate with a focus on policy. The following paraphrased statements were compiled from the transcript of the debate. A candidate's opponents are generally not mentioned in his or her summary unless there was a significant exchange between them.

    Kamala Harris called Trump's response to the coronavirus pandemic the greatest failure of any administration. She said Trump and Pence knew the virus was airborne and deadly in January 2020 and did not provide Americans with the information they needed. She said Biden’s coronavirus plan focused on contact tracing and testing. She said she would take a vaccine if public health officials recommended it.

    Harris discussed her career as a state attorney general and senator. She said voters had a right to know about the president’s health and tax records. She said Trump was $400 million in debt. Harris said Biden would repeal Trump’s tax bill and not raise taxes on anyone making less than $400,000 a year. She said Trump rode the coattails of the economic recovery Biden created. She said Biden did not want to end fracking. She said Trump was trying to end the Affordable Care Act and that this would eliminate protections for people with preexisting conditions.

    Harris said the Trump administration does not believe in science. She said Biden would invest in renewable energy and reach net zero emissions by 2050. She said Trump lost the trade war with China and 300,000 manufacturing jobs. She said Biden saved the auto industry. Harris said Trump disbanded the office responsible for monitoring pandemics. She said Trump made America unsafe through a unilateral and isolationist foreign policy. She said Trump insulted and did not care about service members.

    Harris said President Lincoln waited until after his re-election to fill a Supreme Court vacancy that occurred 27 days before the presidential election. She said Trump should also wait. She said Trump had not appointed a Black judge to a lifetime appointment on the courts of appeal. Harris said justice was not done in Breonna Taylor’s case and called for criminal justice reform. She said implicit bias existed in law enforcement. Harris said Trump has openly attempted to suppress the vote.

    Mike Pence said Trump suspended all travel from China in response to the coronavirus pandemic and saved hundreds of thousands of lives. He said he believed the U.S. would have a vaccine before the end of the year. Pence said Trump surged resources to states with high fatality rates. He said the Rose Garden event announcing Amy Coney Barrett’s Supreme Court nomination followed scientific advice. He said Trump trusted Americans to make decisions about their own health.

    Pence said Harris was undermining public confidence in a vaccine. He said the Obama administration failed during the swine flu pandemic and were lucky that it was less lethal than COVID-19. Pence said Trump paid millions of dollars in property and payroll taxes. He said Trump had added back 11.6 million jobs since the pandemic began. Pence said Biden wanted to ban fracking. He said the United States reduced CO2 emissions through innovation rather than mandates.

    Pence said the United States lost 200,000 manufacturing jobs when Biden was vice president. He said Harris put her environmental agenda ahead of American workers by opposing the United States–Mexico–Canada trade agreement. Pence said Trump strengthened alliances in the Asia Pacific and destroyed the ISIS caliphate. He said Biden failed to save ISIS hostage Kayla Mueller.

    Pence questioned whether Harris would give Amy Coney Barrett a fair hearing because of Barrett's Christian faith. He said he was pro-life. He said the Trump administration stood behind the separation of powers and a nine-seat Supreme Court. Pence said he trusted the justice system in Breonna Taylor’s case. He said there was no excuse for the rioting and looting that followed George Floyd’s death. He said Harris did nothing for criminal justice reform in California. He said Democrats had spent the past three years trying to overturn the results of the 2016 election. Pence said universal mail-in voting created the opportunity for fraud.

    First debate on September 29, 2020

    See also: Presidential debate (September 29, 2020)

    The Commission on Presidential Debates held the first of three presidential debates on September 29, 2020, between President Donald Trump (R) and former Vice President Joe Biden (D).

    The debate was 90 minutes without commercial breaks. It was divided into 15-minute segments on the following six topics:[7]

    • The Trump and Biden records
    • The Supreme Court
    • COVID-19
    • The economy
    • Race and violence in our cities
    • The integrity of the election

    Fox News' Chris Wallace, the debate's moderator, selected the topics.[8]

    Case Western Reserve University and Cleveland Clinic in Cleveland, Ohio, co-hosted the debate. The University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana, was originally scheduled to host the event but withdrew on July 27, 2020, in response to the coronavirus pandemic.[9][10] The debate took place in person at the Sheila and Eric Samson Pavilion.[11]

    To qualify, a candidate had to meet certain constitutional, ballot access, and polling requirements. Click here to learn more about them.


    Joe Biden (D)

    Donald Trump (R)
    HIGHLIGHTS
  • Date: September 29, 2020, at 9:00 p.m. ET
  • Location: Cleveland, Ohio
  • Venue: Case Western Reserve University and Cleveland Clinic
  • Moderator: Chris Wallace
  • Video and transcript

    By the numbers

    Candidate highlights

    This section includes highlights for each presidential candidate with a focus on policy. The following paraphrased statements were compiled from the transcript of the debate. A candidate's opponents are generally not mentioned in his or her summary unless there was a significant exchange between them.

    Joe Biden discussed the Supreme Court vacancy, coronavirus pandemic, economy, race and violence, climate change, and election integrity. Biden said the Supreme Court vacancy should be filled after the election to give voters a say. He said the Affordable Care Act and women’s rights were at stake with Amy Coney Barrett’s nomination. On healthcare, Biden said only people who qualified for Medicaid would be automatically enrolled in a public health option. He said Trump had no healthcare plan. Biden said Trump knew how deadly the COVID-19 pandemic was and did not have a plan to address it. He said Trump was irresponsible with his handling of masks. He said schools and businesses were not supported to reopen safely. Biden said billionaires benefited from COVID-19 because Trump focused on the stock market. He said Trump would be the first president to leave office with fewer jobs than when he came in. Biden said his economic plan would create 7 million more jobs than Trump had and $1 trillion in economic growth. He said he would raise the corporate tax rate to 28%. He said the Obama administration inherited the worst economy and fixed it, while Trump blew a booming economy.

    He said Trump’s statements about Biden's son’s business dealings had been discredited. He criticized Trump’s response to protests in Charlottesville in 2017 and George Floyd’s death. Biden said there was systemic injustice and called for increased funding for community policing. He said violent crime has increased under the Trump administration. Biden discussed the military service of his son, Beau, and the drug addiction recovery of his other son, Hunter. Biden said his plan would create thousands of green jobs and lead to net-zero carbon emissions by 2035. He said the plan was not the Green New Deal. Biden said Trump was afraid of mail-in voting.

    Donald Trump discussed the Supreme Court vacancy, coronavirus pandemic, economy, race and violence, climate change, and election integrity. Trump praised his Supreme Court pick, Amy Coney Barrett. He said Republicans had the right to nominate her because they won the last election. He said Biden supported socialist medicine. Trump said he signed an executive order that would reduce prescription drug prices. Trump said millions would have died from COVID-19 if Biden were president. He said a vaccine could be available sooner but politics was delaying it. He criticized strict shutdowns in Democratic-run states and said Biden would shut down the country. Trump said he paid millions in federal income tax in 2016 and 2017. As a businessman, Trump said he did not want to pay taxes and used tax credits and depreciation. Trump said the Obama administration had the slowest economic recovery since 1929, while he brought back manufacturing and 700,000 jobs. Trump said Biden’s son, Hunter, received $3.5 million from a Russian billionaire.

    Trump criticized the effect of Biden’s 1994 crime bill on Black Americans. He said he had support from military leaders and law enforcement groups across the country. Trump said he ended racial sensitivity training because it was racist. Trump said increases in crime across the country were a party issue. When asked if he would condemn white supremacist and militia groups, Trump said sure. He said the Proud Boys should stand back and stand by and that someone should do something about Antifa. Trump said he created the greatest economy and lowest unemployment numbers in history prior to COVID-19. He said that he will have appointed 300 federal judges. Trump attributed West Coast wildfires to poor forest management. He said he rolled back the Obama Clean Power Plan because it drove up energy prices. He said there was no free transition in 2016 because Democrats sought a coup on his campaign. He said unsolicited mail-in ballots would lead to fraud.


    Candidate selection criteria

    The Commission on Presidential Debates (CPD) used the following criteria to select candidates to participate in the 2020 general election presidential debates:[12]

    • The candidate must satisfy the constitutional eligibility requirements, including being at least 35 years old, a natural born citizen, and a resident of the United States for fourteen years.
    • The candidate must appear on enough state ballots to be eligible to secure at least 270 electoral votes—a majority in the Electoral College—or more.
    • The candidate must receive, on average, at least 15% support nationally in the most recent polls from five public opinion polling organizations. The CPD will use the following polls:
      • ABC/Washington Post Poll
      • CNN Poll
      • Fox News Poll
      • NBC/Wall Street Journal Poll
      • NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist Poll

    Noteworthy events

    Logistical changes in response to the coronavirus pandemic

    The University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana, was originally scheduled to host the first presidential debate but withdrew in response to the coronavirus pandemic. On July 27, 2020, the event was moved to Cleveland, Ohio.[13][14]

    On June 23, 2020, the commission announced the second presidential debate was moving from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Michigan, to the Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts in Miami, Florida. Mark Schlissel, the president of the University of Michigan, said the complexity of preparing for a safe reopening during the coronavirus pandemic made hosting the debate unfeasible.[15][16]

    Request for additional debates

    In August 2020, Rudy Giuliani sent a letter to the Commission on Presidential Debates on behalf of the Trump campaign requesting a fourth debate be held in early September before states began to send out absentee ballots. If not, Giuliani said the third debate should be moved from October 22, 2020, to the first week in September.[17]

    The commission rejected the request to add a fourth debate or alter the schedule. “While more people will likely vote by mail in 2020, the debate schedule has been and will be highly publicized. Any voter who wishes to watch one or more debates before voting will be well aware of that opportunity,” the commission’s co-chairs said on August 6, 2020.[18]

    The Trump campaign previously requested that the commission organize a fourth debate in June 2020. In a phone call with Frank Fahrenkopf, the co-chair of the commission, Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale said, "We want fair debates. We want them sooner and we want a bigger schedule. We also don’t want them up against football games competing for viewers."[19]

    The Trump campaign also requested that both campaigns be permitted to select and veto moderators.[19]

    The Biden campaign responded in a letter to the commission, "Our position is straightforward and clear: Biden will accept the Commission's debates, on the Commission's dates, under the Commission's established format and the Commission's independent choice of moderators." Biden campaign manager Jennifer O'Malley Dillon called the request a distraction.[19]

    Democratic presidential primary debates, 2019-2020

    See also: Democratic presidential nomination, 2020

    The following table provides an overview of the date, location, host, and number of participants in each scheduled 2020 Democratic presidential primary debate.

    2020 Democratic presidential primary debates
    Debate Date Location Host Number of participants
    First Democratic primary debate June 26-27, 2019 Miami, Florida NBC News, MSNBC, and Telemundo 20 candidates
    Second Democratic primary debate July 30-31, 2019 Detroit, Michigan CNN 20 candidates
    Third Democratic primary debate September 12, 2019 Houston, Texas ABC News and Univision 10 candidates
    Fourth Democratic primary debate October 15, 2019 Westerville, Ohio CNN and The New York Times 12 candidates
    Fifth Democratic primary debate November 20, 2019 Georgia MSNBC and The Washington Post 10 candidates
    Sixth Democratic primary debate December 19, 2019 Los Angeles, California PBS NewsHour and Politico 7 candidates
    Seventh Democratic primary debate January 14, 2020 Des Moines, Iowa CNN and The Des Moines Register 6 candidates
    Eighth Democratic primary debate February 7, 2020 Manchester, New Hampshire ABC, WMUR-TV, and Apple News 7 candidates
    Ninth Democratic primary debate February 19, 2020 Las Vegas, Nevada NBC News and MSNBC 6 candidates
    Tenth Democratic primary debate February 25, 2020 Charleston, South Carolina CBS News and Congressional Black Caucus Institute 7 candidates
    Eleventh Democratic primary debate March 15, 2020 Washington, D.C. CNN, Univision, and CHC Bold 2 candidates


    History of televised presidential debates

    Although the 1960 general election debate between John F. Kennedy (D) and Richard Nixon (R) is frequently cited as the first televised presidential debate, two came before it.

    The first televised presidential debate took place on May 21, 1956, when an ABC affiliate in Miami broadcast a Democratic primary debate between Adlai Stevenson and Estes Kefauver.[20] In the general election that year, Stevenson and incumbent President Dwight Eisenhower (R) used surrogates in a televised debate on November 4, 1956. They were represented by former First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt (D) and Sen. Margaret Chase Smith (R), respectively.[21]

    The Kennedy-Nixon debates that took place four years later showed the importance of television as a visual medium, "Nixon, pale and underweight from a recent hospitalization, appeared sickly and sweaty, while Kennedy appeared calm and confident. As the story goes, those who listened to the debate on the radio thought Nixon had won. But those listeners were in the minority. ... Those that watched the debate on TV thought Kennedy was the clear winner. Many say Kennedy won the election that night," TIME reported on the 50th anniversary of the event.[22]

    While a handful of presidential primary debates were held between 1964 and 1972, the televised presidential debate did not become a staple of American politics until 1976.[23]

    Overview

    The following chart shows the number of presidential and vice presidential debates that took place in each election cycle between 1960 and 2020.

    List of presidential debates, 1960-2020

    The following table shows the date, location, and moderators for each presidential debate between 1960 and 2020.[24]

    Presidential debates, 1960-2020
    Date Location Moderator
    September 26, 1960 Chicago, IL Howard K. Smith, CBS News
    October 7, 1960 Washington, D.C. Frank McGee, NBC
    October 13, 1960 Los Angeles, CA / New York, NY Bill Shadel, ABC
    October 21, 1960 New York, NY Quincy Howe, ABC News
    September 23, 1976 Philadelphia, PA Edwin Newman, NBC News
    October 6, 1976 San Francisco, CA Pauline Frederick, NPR
    October 22, 1976 Williamsburg, VA Barbara Walters, ABC News
    September 21, 1980 Baltimore, MD Bill Moyers, PBS
    October 28, 1980 Cleveland, OH Howard K. Smith, ABC News
    October 7, 1984 Louisville, KY Barbara Walters, ABC News
    October 21, 1984 Kansas City, KS Edwin Newman, formerly NBC News
    September 25, 1988 Winson-Salem, N.C. Jim Lehrer, PBS
    October 13, 1988 Los Angeles, CA Bernard Shaw, CNN
    October 11, 1992 St. Louis, MO Jim Lehrer, PBS
    October 15, 1992 Richmond, VA Carole Simpson, ABC
    October 19, 1992 East Lansing, MI Jim Lehrer, PBS
    October 6, 1996 Hartford, CT Jim Lehrer, PBS
    October 16, 1996 San Diego, CA Jim Lehrer, PBS
    October 3, 2000 Boston, MA Jim Lehrer, PBS
    October 11, 2000 Winson-Salem, N.C. Jim Lehrer, PBS
    October 17, 2000 St. Louis, MO Jim Lehrer, PBS
    September 30, 2004 Coral Gables, FL Jim Lehrer, PBS
    October 8, 2004 St. Louis, MO Charles Gibson, ABC
    October 13, 2004 Tempe, AZ Bob Schieffer, CBS
    September 26, 2008 Oxford, MS Jim Lehrer, PBS
    October 7, 2008 Nashville, TN Tom Brokaw, NBC
    October 15, 2008 Hempstead, NY Bob Schieffer, CBS
    October 3, 2012 Denver, CO Jim Lehrer, PBS
    October 16, 2012 Hempstead, NY Candy Crowley, CNN
    October 22, 2012 Boca Raton, FL Bob Schieffer, CBS
    September 26, 2016 Hempstead, NY Lester Holt, NBC
    October 9, 2016 St. Louis, MO Martha Raddatz, ABC
    Anderson Cooper, CNN
    October 19, 2016 Las Vegas, NV Chris Wallace, FOX
    September 29, 2020 Cleveland, OH Chris Wallace, FOX
    October 22, 2020 Nashville, TN Kristen Welker, NBC

    2016 presidential debates

    See also: Presidential debates (2015-2016)
    Presidential debate, September 26, 2016

    More than two dozen primary and general election debates took place during the 2016 presidential election cycle. The first general election presidential debate took place on September 26, 2016, in New York. Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump debated and Lester Holt of NBC News moderated. An estimated 84 million people tuned in to the first debate, a record in the history of presidential debates. The previous record was held by Ronald Reagan (R) and Jimmy Carter (D), who attracted 80.6 million viewers in 1980.[25]

    Two more general election debates were held on October 9, 2016, at Washington University and on October 19, 2016, at the University of Nevada. Vice presidential candidates Tim Kaine (D) and Mike Pence (R) also debate on October 4, 2016, at Longwood University.

    2016 presidential primary debates

    Democrats held nine primary debates. The last took place on April 14, 2016, between Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders. Republicans held 12 primary debates; the final debate was held on March 10, 2016, with Donald Trump, Ted Cruz, John Kasich, and Marco Rubio.

    Democratic presidential primary debate, January 17, 2016

    Democratic Debates

    Republican Debates

    Republican presidential primary debate, February 15, 2016

    See also

    Footnotes

    1. CNN, "Commission cancels second debate between Trump and Biden," October 9, 2020
    2. Washington Post, "What to know about the 2020 presidential debates," August 14, 2020
    3. Commission on Presidential Debates, "Moderator Announces Topics for Oct. 22 Presidential Debate," October 16, 2020
    4. Politico, "Debate commission to cut the mics at Trump-Biden showdown," October 19, 2020
    5. NPR, "Debate Commission To Mute Candidates' Mics At Start Of Each Segment," October 19, 2020
    6. Axios, "Commission on Presidential Debates announces moderators," September 2, 2020
    7. Commission on Presidential Debates, "Moderator Announces Topics for First Presidential Debate," September 22, 2020
    8. Washington Post, "What to know about the 2020 presidential debates," August 14, 2020
    9. Commission on Presidential Debates, "CPD Statement," December 16, 2019
    10. Commission on Presidential Debates, "Statement: First Presidential Debate," July 27, 2020
    11. Cleveland Clinic, "Case Western Reserve and Cleveland Clinic to Host First Presidential Debate Tuesday, Sept. 29, in Health Education Campus’ Samson Pavilion," August 27, 2020
    12. Commission on Presidential Debates, "Commission on Presidential Debates Announces Polls to be used in 2020 Candidate Selection Criteria," August 28, 2020
    13. Commission on Presidential Debates, "CPD Statement," December 16, 2019
    14. Commission on Presidential Debates, "Statement: First Presidential Debate," July 27, 2020
    15. Talking Points Memo, "Presidential Debate To Be Moved To Miami After UMich Withdraws Commitment To Host," June 23, 2020
    16. Commission on Presidential Debates, "Statement: Second Presidential Debate," June 23, 2020
    17. Rudy Giuliani, "Letter to the Commission on Presidential Debates," August 5, 2020
    18. CBS12, "Possibility of early presidential debate fades as commission rejects Trump's request," August 6, 2020
    19. 19.0 19.1 19.2 USA Today, "Biden campaign commits to three debates, rejects Trump team's call for more as 'distraction,'" June 23, 2020
    20. Illinois Channel, "From 1956, the First Televised Presidential Debate," June 15, 2016
    21. United States Senate, "The First Televised Presidential Debate," accessed June 12, 2019
    22. TIME, "How the Nixon-Kennedy Debate Changed the World," September 23, 2010
    23. Center for Politics, "Eight Decades of Debate," July 30, 2015
    24. Commission on Presidential Debates, "Debate History," accessed September 28, 2020
    25. Commission on Presidential Debates, "1980 Debates," accessed October 10, 2016