Tuesday, September 10, 2024 |
|
|
The debate Tuesday between Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris will be one to watch: the first time the two personally meet and the first time they'll face off. But what should you watch for? We asked seven MSNBC writers to weigh in on what they'll be looking for during the first presidential debate between Harris and Trump. Here's what they said. ABC News is hosting the first debate between Trump and Harris, but the event will be broadcast everywhere. Watch the debate on MSNBC with all of your favorite hosts and experts. Rachel Maddow and team kick off special coverage starting at 7 p.m. ET. |
|
|
What are you watching for during the first presidential debate between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump? |
|
|
| "The Rachel Maddow Show" producer and MaddowBlog editor |
|
|
When Trump takes the stage, he won't have one opponent; he'll have two. The first, obviously, will be Harris. The second will be himself. What I'll be watching is whether the Republican nominee — who's long struggled to maintain his composure while targeting women, especially women of color — has the discipline, decency and common sense to strike a presidential tone, treat the Democratic nominee with a modicum of respect and avoid the temptation to throw a tantrum that could cost him dearly. If recent history is any guide, even his most optimistic supporters should probably keep expectations low. |
|
|
Harris has worked hard to present herself as the challenger in this race, but Trump has figured out a retort that is difficult for the vice president to answer: "Why didn't you do it?" She will need a good explanation for why she now will be able to solve problems that she hasn't while in the White House. |
|
|
Will Harris be able to bait Trump into descending into one of his unhinged tirades and, if so, what should that tell us about the ease with which Trump can be manipulated (and what are the national security implications that come with it)? Will Trump be able to control himself when challenged by not just a Black woman — but the one who replaced his dream opponent — Joe Biden — on which Trump's entire campaign was built? |
|
|
Watch how Harris uses her time. With muted microphones, time management will be essential. Trump rambles, often unable to deliver a clear, coherent response to just about any question. Harris will watch the clock and make her point — although she may sound a little over-rehearsed — and still leave time to get under Trump's skin. She wins. |
|
|
Persuadable voters are the key audience. They may not watch the debate in real time, but they will catch key moments in clips. For those voters, new information is what will move their candidate preference. Voters want to know more about Harris. She must share her biography, accomplishments and plans for her presidency, specifically around her opportunity agenda. Moreover, she must not only remind voters what Trump did during his first term, but connect those actions to future actions. |
|
|
I wrote about this for the MSNBC Daily newsletter on Friday. I want to see if Harris can thread the needle between appearing prosecutorial and being presidential. When she's on the stage with a pathological liar, her instinct will be to correct him and throw facts back. That might work to a degree and at specific times, but the trap is to remember she's not running for California attorney general; she's running for president of the United States. |
|
|
Because Biden's debate performance was so historically disastrous, people forget how genuinely awful Trump was. He lied incessantly, blustered and got lost in his own gibberish. If anything, he's gotten worse since then; and now he faces a far more formidable opponent in Harris. This is her challenge: she has to be the grown-up in the room while calling out his lies, his threats, and his insults — without being dragged down into the Trumpian muck. If she does, she will have turned the corner in the race. |
|
|
MADDOWBLOG'S CAMPAIGN ROUND-UP |
|
|
- While the latest national poll from the Pew Research Center found Trump and Harris tied, with each garnering 49%, the latest NPR/PBS News/Marist poll found the Democratic nominee narrowly ahead, 51% to 48%, among Americans who definitely intend to vote.
- The final primaries of the 2024 cycle will be held this week in New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Delaware, and there are some congressional and gubernatorial contests of note.
- The Michigan Supreme Court has ruled that Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s name must remain on the state's presidential ballot, overturning an appeals court ruling. The independent conspiracy theorist had more success with North Carolina's Supreme Court, which ruled that Kennedy can withdraw his name from the state's 2024 ballot. Read Steve Benen's full round-up here.
|
|
|
Trump and Harris will debate for 90 minutes, with two commercial breaks. They will be given two minutes to answer questions. |
|
|
Tonight, Rachel Maddow and team lead special coverage and analysis of Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Trump's first presidential debate hosted by ABC News. Special coverage begins at 7 p.m. ET on MSNBC. |
|
| 30 Rockefeller Plaza New York, NY 10112 |
|
|
|