Please register to access this content.
To continue viewing the content you love, please sign in or create a new account
Dismiss
This content is for our paying subscribers only

World Americas

Muted mics and no audience: How the Biden-Trump debate will work

CNN, which is hosting hopefuls for first debate of 2024 campaign, wants to avoid chaos



There will be two commercial breaks during the showdown between 78-year-old Trump and 81-year-old Biden, the two oldest presumptive White House nominees in history.
Image Credit: AFP

NEW YORK: There will be no studio audience, depriving candidates of the momentum that comes from ginning up supporters. Microphones will cut out when a candidate’s speaking time is over. Thursday night’s presidential debate will not be business as usual.

CNN, which is hosting President Joe Biden and his predecessor Donald Trump for their first debate of the 2024 campaign in Atlanta, wants to avoid the chaos seen when the two men squared off in 2020.

When and where you can watch?
90-minute debate, which will start at 9pm ET on Thursday (5am Friday UAE), will air on CNN channels and will be simulcast on MSNBC — where prime-time coverage with Rachel Maddow and others will kick off at 7pm — and other major networks.

Get exclusive content with Gulf News WhatsApp channel

Here are some facts about the 90-minute debate, a key moment in the race for the White House, but one whose impact is difficult to predict.

Advertisement

Averting mayhem

In their first war of words four years ago, Trump repeatedly cut off the veteran Democrat, launched into lengthy diatribes and taunted his rival, who ended up shouting at one point: “Will you shut up, man?”

Also read

It was hardly the height of presidential decorum.

To cut down on the hijinks, CNN has set up a series of rules, to which both campaigns agreed.

CNN Atlanta studios.
Image Credit: AFP
Advertisement

Among the most notable

When the candidates take the stage at the network’s Atlanta studios at 9pm (5am Friday UAE), there will be no one in the audience.

Microphones will be muted except for the candidate asked to speak. There will be two commercial breaks during the showdown between 78-year-old Trump and 81-year-old Biden, the two oldest presumptive White House nominees in history.

Moderators Jake Tapper and Dana Bash, both regular CNN on-air presenters, will “use all tools at their disposal to enforce timing and ensure a civilized discussion,” the network said.

Trump gets last word

Biden won the coin toss, allowing him to choose either his podium position or whether he preferred to speak first or second in final statements.

Advertisement

The incumbent chose the podium on the viewers’ right, and Trump opted to have the last word.

No live fact-checking

CNN has not revealed the debate themes, and does not plan to fact-check candidate statements in real time — even if Trump repeats the baseless charge that the 2020 election was stolen from him.

For Kathleen Hall Jamieson, a professor of communication at the University of Pennsylvania, “one problem with a debate that features Donald Trump is that the moderators don’t fact check in real time, nor should they.”

“It’s highly risky to try to do that and it would be disruptive of the debate if they did,” she told AFP. “The danger is instead of informing, a debate could actually increase the amount of inaccurate knowledge.”

Biden and Trump will not have teleprompters and they cannot bring pre-written notes to the stage, although they will be provided with paper and pen. Consulting with campaign staff during commercial breaks will not be allowed.

Advertisement

Debate airs on all networks

Both candidates rejected the oversight of the nonpartisan Commission on Presidential Debates formed in 1987 to manage such events.

Instead, they made a direct deal with CNN. The news network, now owned by media conglomerate Warner Bros Discovery, afforded its rivals the opportunity to broadcast the debate live in the name of public service, under certain conditions.

The screen must bear the CNN logo and outside commentary is forbidden.

Fox News — which regularly attacks CNN as biased against Trump - plans to hit the airwaves two hours before the event, with talk show hosts Jesse Watters and Sean Hannity providing pre-game insights.

In the past, Hannity has called Tapper a “radical left-wing partisan talk show host masquerading as a journalist.”

Advertisement

Impact on campaign?

The debate will certainly be a key moment in the campaign, watched by tens of millions: A record 84 million tuned in to watch Trump’s first battle with Hillary Clinton in 2016, and 73 million saw Trump and Biden duke it out in 2020.

But it will not necessarily be a game-changer.

This is the first time a debate has been organized so early in the race, more than four months before Election Day, and even before the candidates have been formally nominated by their respective parties.

“The worry is that the public in the United States doesn’t pay much attention to news in summer,” said Jamieson.

“In general, presidential debates don’t affect a sufficient number of votes to decide the outcome of an election. But when an election is close, as this one may be, debates can play an important role.”

Advertisement

ABC is scheduled to host a second debate on September 10.

Advertisement