We’re still more than an hour away from the start of CNN’s presidential debate in Atlanta, but various besuited, well-coiffed, seemingly all male politicians are already in the spin room the network has set up, where they are … well, they’re spinning reporters.
We’re talking about people like California’s Democratic governor Gavin Newsom, who is thought to be a presidential contender some day:
Gavin Newsom spinning what appears to be a foreign news outlet. Photograph: Pablo Martínez Monsiváis/AP
And Republican congressman Byron Donalds, a potential vice-presidential pick for Trump:
Byron Donald talks to the press at CNN studios. Photograph: Pablo Martínez Monsiváis/AP
As well as Corey Lewandowski, who was Trump’s campaign manager for part of his first run for the White House:
Corey Lewandowski, spinning them. Photograph: Pablo Martínez Monsiváis/AP
There are a few aspects of this debate that are different from Biden and Trump’s previous encounters, which were organized by the non-profit Commission on Presidential Debates.
For this election, the two campaigns opted to sideline the nonprofit and attend an event hosted by CNN, and the network’s rules are a little different than those of previous years.
For one, there will be two commercial breaks during the event, but Biden and Trump’s staff cannot interact with them while the cameras are off (one wonders if there will be any small talk between the two adversaries).
And then there’s the fact that the CNN control room has the option of muting either man’s microphone if they interrupt the other – which could change things for Trump, in particular, since he likes to talk over people.
Finally, there will be no audience in the studio, which means that if Trump or Biden lands a zinger, or flubs a line, you won’t hear applause, gasps or laughs.
Here’s more from CNN on how this evening’s debate will work:
Inside the first presidential debate: How exactly is this going to work?
Good evening, US politics blog readers. All eyes are on CNN studios in Atlanta this evening, where Donald Trump and Joe Biden will be holding the first of two debates scheduled before the 5 November presidential election. Polls show that the candidates are nearly neck-in-neck in the race for the White House, and that many Americans are not pleased at having to put up with a rematch of the 2020 election, where Biden bested Trump. Since then, the Democratic president has seen his job approval sink, while Trump has been criminally indicted four separate times, with one of those cases resulting in his conviction on 34 felony charges last month. There will be plenty to see in tonight’s 90-minute showdown, but both campaigns are hoping for one specific event: a breakthrough moment that captures the public’s attention, and gives Trump or Biden renewed momentum. We will see if that happens.
Here’s what else we are watching out for:
Make no mistake: Biden can sometimes still give a good speech. But at 81, he is also the oldest president to ever serve, and has a tendency to garble his words and mix up facts. Will it undermine him on the debate stage?
Trump, who, at 78, is similarly old, can also flop when it comes to speechmaking – just look at how he rambled on after being convicted in his New York hush-money trial last month. How might he stack up against Biden, who always aims to stay on message?
The format of this debate is unique in a few ways, since CNN is hosting instead of the non-profit Commission on Presidential Debates, which was spurned by both campaigns. There will be commercial breaks, for one, and, in a break from Biden and Trump’s previous encounters in 2020, when the then-president’s over-the-top attacks didn’t do him any favors, CNN has the power to turn off their microphones if they start arguing. What might that lead to when the two men, who do not like each other at all, are in the same room for the first time in four years?