2nd US Presidential Debate Doubtful As Trump Rejects Virtual Format

'Dotun Akintomide
Writer

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Agency Reporter — US President Donald Trump said on Thursday he would not participate in a virtual debate, scheduled for Oct. 15, with his Democratic rival, Joe Biden.

His position throws into doubt whether the second presidential debate would happen.

His words came moments after the commission that oversees the debates said the event would be conducted from remote locations in the wake of his COVID-19 diagnosis.

“That’s not acceptable to us,” Trump said on a phone call with Fox Business, adding he thought the virtual format would allow the moderator to cut him off.

Trump said he would not attend the debate if he was contagious but that he thinks he is now well enough to hold campaign rallies.

The Commission on Presidential Debates said the debate would remain a town hall-style conversation and that voters and the moderator will ask the candidates questions from the original debate site in Miami.

The first Trump-Biden debate was chaotic, with Trump repeatedly talking over his rival and the moderator, leading some to call for the moderator to have the option of muting participants’ microphones in future matchups.
It was not immediately clear how the virtual format would work.
The Biden campaign welcomed the move.

“Vice President Biden looks forward to speaking directly to the American people and comparing his plan for bringing the country together and building back better with Donald Trump’s failed leadership on the coronavirus that has thrown the strong economy he inherited into the worst downturn since the Great Depression,” said deputy campaign manager Kate Bedingfield.

The news came a day after the sole vice presidential debate between Vice President Mike Pence and Biden’s running mate, Senator Kamala Harris, who clashed repeatedly over the Trump administration’s response to the pandemic, which has killed more than 210,000 Americans.

Biden and Harris will travel together to the battleground state of Arizona on Thursday, while Pence will also visit the Southwestern state after starting his day in Nevada.

Nevada and Arizona, where the candidates will travel on Thursday, are critical swing states in the Nov. 3 election. Biden has led Trump consistently in national polls, but polls show a tighter race in many of the states that will decide the election.

Trump, who revealed a week ago that he had tested positive for coronavirus, said he is ready to return to the campaign trail.

With less than four weeks to go until the November election, more than 5 million votes have already been cast.

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