The commission organizing the second presidential debate in Miami on October 15 said it would have to take place remotely after President Donald Trump tested positive for coronavirus.
President Trump has refused to take part in a virtual TV debate with his Democratic rival Joe Biden.
The president’s refusal sparked a day of wrangling about how and when any further debates would take place.
At the moment it appears a debate could take place on October 22, although in what form remains to be seen.
The first presidential debate on September 29 had descended into insults and interruptions. The vice-presidential debate, held on October 7 between Mike Pence and Kamala Harris, was a far more measured affair.
Latest opinion polls suggest Joe Biden has a high single digit lead nationally, but the outcome is often decided in battleground states where the races can be much closer.
Six million votes have already been cast in early voting.
The Commission on Presidential Debates announced that candidates would take part in the Miami debate “from separate remote locations… to protect the health and safety of all involved”.
This infuriated the president who, in a phone-in interview with Fox Business Channel, said he was “not gonna waste my time” on a virtual debate and “sit behind a computer, ridiculous”.
Joe Biden said the president “changed his mind every second” and his campaign team added that Donald Trump “clearly does not want to face questions from the voters”.
The Trump campaign answered back, with manager Bill Stepien calling the commission’s decision to “rush to Joe Biden’s defense… pathetic” and saying President Trump would hold a rally instead on October 15.
The Biden team then proposed the town-hall style debate, set for Miami, should go ahead on October 22 instead.
This brought a brief moment of agreement, on the date at least.
However, the Trump team said there should be a third face-to-face debate – on October 29, just five days before polling.
The Biden team refused. Three dates had been set for debates – September 29, October 15 and October 22. That would be it.
On October 15, Joe Biden will now take part in his own primetime event on ABC answering questions from voters.
Quite what format any Biden-Trump debate takes now is hard to pin down.
The president touched on a number of key matters, including his health and the possibility of movement towards a stimulus package for the economy.
On his health, President Trump said: “I’m back because I’m a perfect physical specimen.”
He said he had stopped taking most “therapeutics” but was still taking steroids and would be tested for Covid again “soon”.
Although his doctor has said he now has no symptoms, questions still remain about when the president first became infected and whether he could still be contagious.
And although the names of many people who have interacted with the president and tested positive are now known, it remains unclear just how many were exposed at the White House. New Covid safety measures are in place there.
One of the top Republicans, Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell, said on October 8 that he had not been to the White House since August 6 because its approach to handling Covid with social distancing and masks was “different from mine and what I suggested we do in the Senate”.
October 8, President Trump said that “somebody got in and people got infected” but gave no more details.
A gathering on September 26 announcing President Trump’s Supreme Court pick has been seen as a possible “super-spreader” event, with several attendees known to have tested positive.
President Barack Obama came out swinging in the second debate with Mitt Romney, according to the latest polls, although who actually won was open to interpretation.
According to a national survey, 46% of those watching the town hall on Tuesday night believed that Barack Obama had won – while 39% sided with Mitt Romney.
In the second of their three debates, Barack Obama and Mitt Romney attacked each other viciously at Hofstra University in Hempstead, New York.
The figures gathered by CNN/ORC showed that the majority believed Barack Obama’s performance was superior (73%) compared to 37% who held the opinion about Mitt Romney.
The poll is a dramatic turn of events for the candidates face-off on October 3 in Denver when 67% of registered voters said the debate was won by Mitt Romney and only 25% opting for Barack Obama.
Barack Obama came out swinging in the second debate with Mitt Romney, according to the latest polls
When it came to the most likeable, Barack Obama beat Mitt Romney 47-41%.
However, on big issues such as the economy, Mitt Romney soared ahead with an 18-point lead on the President.
Almost half of viewers (49%) believed that Barack Obama was more on the offensive than his opponent (35%). However, Mitt Romney had the edge on who was the stronger leader at 49-46%.
Some 457 registered voters were interviewed by CNN on Tuesday night after the end of the 90-minute showdown. Of those interview, 33% were Republicans and the same percentage Democrats.
In another poll by CBS, 37% of those surveyed said Barack Obama won with Mitt Romney trailing at 30%. A third (33%) said the debate was a tie.
First Lady Michelle Obama and Ann Romney both appeared to be going after the women’s vote at the second presidential debate with an obvious fashion choice.
Michelle Obama wore a coat-style, hot pink dress while Ann Romney wore a shift with capped sleeves in exactly the same shade.
The wives of the presidential candidates took their seats as their husbands appeared on stage at Hofstra University in New York on Tuesday.
Twitter users suggested that both wives had chosen the color to honor Breast Cancer Awareness Month.
While Ann Romney wore a necklace made of several strands of glass beads, the First Lady favored a single row of pearls.
Michelle Obama and Ann Romney wear identical hot pink outfits at presidential debate
Barack Obama’s biggest task last night in the second presidential debate was to woo back “waitress moms” so crucial to his re-election, after a poll showed Mitt Romney has stole their votes in the first showdown and they are now neck and neck among women voters.
According to a Gallup/USA Today poll of 12 swing states, Mitt Romney leads Barack Obama by 12 points among men.
According to a Gallup/USA Today poll of 12 swing states, Mitt Romney leads Barack Obama by 12 points among men, ahead of tonight’s second presidential debate.
But it is his surge among women voters to within one point of Barack Obama that has given him a four-point overall lead that sets him on course to win the White House on November 6th.
The poll, released on the eve of the second presidential debate in Hampstead, New York, marks an apparent end to months of double-digit Barack Obama leads over Mitt Romney among women and has plunged Democrats into panic mode.
Unlike the first debate, the second meeting will be in a “town hall” format in which undecided ordinary voters – probably about a dozen – will pose questions. At least half of them are likely to be women. In addition, the debate will be moderated by a woman – CNN’s Candy Crowley.
Democrats traditionally enjoy a marked advantage among women. Bill Clinton’s 1996 re-election was said to have been based on winning over middle class, aspirational so-called “soccer moms”. But Barack Obama’s popularity among females has plummeted after Mitt Romney’s commanding debate performance in Denver nearly two weeks ago.
Vice-President Joe Biden’s bullying display over Mitt Romney’s running mate Paul Ryan also left many women voters feeling alienated.
Within an hour of the Gallup survey being released, the Obama campaign – which recently mocked Republicans for questioning poll methodology, went on the offensive against the 75-year-old polling firm. Reporters were sent a memo from Barack Obama pollster Joel Benenson.
In it, Joel Benenson said: “The latest Gallup/USA Today Battleground survey showing President Obama and Governor Romney tied with women in battleground states (48-48) is an extreme outlier, defying the trends seen in every other battleground and national poll.”
Overall, Mitt Romney has 50% of support among likely voters in the 12 battleground states, while Barack Obama is trailing with 46% support, according to the survey.
Without winning women, Barack Obama’s path to victory in November is complicated, if not impossible.
The memo includes a chart of selected surveys from a handful of battleground states that give Barack Obama a 10-point lead over Mitt Romney among women nationally.
“This implausible result among women appears to not even provide an accurate reflection on the electorate today, making its value questionable,” Joel Benenson insisted.
Mitt Romney is now neck and neck with Barack Obama among women voters, according to a new Gallup survey
Women tend to start paying close attention to election campaigns later and are more open to persuasion than men. This makes female voters, particularly the blue-collar “waitress moms” whose families have been hard-hit by the recession and unemployment, the most-prized group of swing voters in 2012.
Celinda Lake, a veteran Democratic pollster, told USA Today: “In every poll, we’ve seen a major surge among women in favorability for Romney” since the Denver debate.
“Women went into the debate actively disliking Romney, and they came out thinking he might understand their lives and might be able to get something done for them.”
She added that while Barack Obama currently maintains an edge among women voters, the changed views of Mitt Romney could be “a precursor to movement” in greater numbers towards the Republican nominee.
“It opens them up to take a second look, and that’s the danger for Obama.”
Democrats were scrambling Monday to maintain their historical edge among female voters. Party officials held a conference call in an effort to raise alarm over how a Republican administration would impact women’s lives negatively and the progressive group MoveOn.org released an ad starring three Hollywood actresses who claimed Republicans would try to end abortion rights for women.
The Romney campaign, on the other hand, touted the survey’s findings as proof that women are increasingly concerned about the economy instead of issues like birth control. Republicans said the survey shows women feel Mitt Romney is better equipped than Barack Obama to spur economic growth.
Mitt Romney’s path to winning a greater share of the female voting bloc has been long and arduous.
He trailed the president by 18 percentage points among female voters in a Gallup survey from April, around the time that Democrats were attacking Republicans for “waging a war on women” by supporting legislation that would limit insurance coverage for contraceptives.
That’s when Mitt Romney’s advisers decided to step up the visibility of his wife, Ann, on the campaign trail to try and make Romney more relatable as a husband and a father.
The campaign also organized “Women for Romney” grassroots groups in battleground states across the country and began cutting dozens of television ads that featured clips of Ann talking about Mitt Romney’s “softer” side.
The strategy has helped Mitt Romney slowly chip away at Barack Obama’s lead among female voters and after the president’s decidedly lackluster debate performance earlier this month, Romney appears to be finally closing the gender gap.
As Mitt Romney looks to maintain the progress he’s made among female voters, he’s likely to tread lightly on topics such as abortion and birth control during tonight’s debate – and to pivot back to the economy whenever possible.
President Barack Obama, on the other hand, will be looking for every opportunity to remind female voters of the measures he has enacted while in office that target women, such as the Lily Ledbetter Fair Pay Act.
Barack Obama will also be looking for every chance to remind women that that he was raised by a single mom and that he is the father of two daughters.
NEW DEBATE FORMAT
Unlike the first presidential debate, tonight’s debate will be in a “town hall” format, meaning candidates will answer questions from members of an audience, rather than a moderator.
There are 80 audience members total, which were selected by Gallup from a sample of undecided voters who live near the debate’s location in Hempstead on Long Island.
The participants had to submit their questions ahead of time. The debate moderator, CNN’s Candy Crowley, will decide who to call on during the debate based on her reviews of their submitted questions.
The candidates will have two minutes to respond to each question, after which the moderator can ask a follow-up question of her choosing.
The candidates will have one minute to respond to the moderator’s question.
The “town hall” format is designed to be more relaxed and conversational, with the candidates free to walk around the forum instead of remaining confined behind a podium or a desk.
But the format also lends itself to more opportunities for unplanned or candid events, such as the 1992 debate where President George Bush was caught on camera checking his watch.
According to a Gallup/USA Today poll of 12 swing states, Mitt Romney leads Barack Obama by 12 points among men, ahead of tonight’s second presidential debate.
But it is his surge among women voters to within one point of Barack Obama that has given him a four-point overall lead that sets him on course to win the White House on November 6th.
The poll, released on the eve of the second presidential debate in Hampstead, New York, marks an apparent end to months of double-digit Barack Obama leads over Mitt Romney among women and has plunged Democrats into panic mode.
Unlike the first debate, the second meeting will be in a “town hall” format in which undecided ordinary voters – probably about a dozen – will pose questions. At least half of them are likely to be women. In addition, the debate will be moderated by a woman – CNN’s Candy Crowley.
Democrats traditionally enjoy a marked advantage among women. Bill Clinton’s 1996 re-election was said to have been based on winning over middle class, aspirational so-called “soccer moms”. But Barack Obama’s popularity among females has plummeted after Mitt Romney’s commanding debate performance in Denver nearly two weeks ago.
Vice-President Joe Biden’s bullying display over Mitt Romney’s running mate Paul Ryan also left many women voters feeling alienated.
Within an hour of the Gallup survey being released, the Obama campaign – which recently mocked Republicans for questioning poll methodology, went on the offensive against the 75-year-old polling firm. Reporters were sent a memo from Barack Obama pollster Joel Benenson.
In it, Joel Benenson said: “The latest Gallup/USA Today Battleground survey showing President Obama and Governor Romney tied with women in battleground states (48-48) is an extreme outlier, defying the trends seen in every other battleground and national poll.”
Overall, Mitt Romney has 50% of support among likely voters in the 12 battleground states, while Barack Obama is trailing with 46% support, according to the survey.
Without winning women, Barack Obama’s path to victory in November is complicated, if not impossible.
The memo includes a chart of selected surveys from a handful of battleground states that give Barack Obama a 10-point lead over Mitt Romney among women nationally.
“This implausible result among women appears to not even provide an accurate reflection on the electorate today, making its value questionable,” Joel Benenson insisted.
Women tend to start paying close attention to election campaigns later and are more open to persuasion than men. This makes female voters, particularly the blue-collar “waitress moms” whose families have been hard-hit by the recession and unemployment, the most-prized group of swing voters in 2012.
Celinda Lake, a veteran Democratic pollster, told USA Today: “In every poll, we’ve seen a major surge among women in favorability for Romney” since the Denver debate.
“Women went into the debate actively disliking Romney, and they came out thinking he might understand their lives and might be able to get something done for them.”
She added that while Barack Obama currently maintains an edge among women voters, the changed views of Mitt Romney could be “a precursor to movement” in greater numbers towards the Republican nominee.
“It opens them up to take a second look, and that’s the danger for Obama.”
Democrats were scrambling Monday to maintain their historical edge among female voters. Party officials held a conference call in an effort to raise alarm over how a Republican administration would impact women’s lives negatively and the progressive group MoveOn.org released an ad starring three Hollywood actresses who claimed Republicans would try to end abortion rights for women.
The Romney campaign, on the other hand, touted the survey’s findings as proof that women are increasingly concerned about the economy instead of issues like birth control. Republicans said the survey shows women feel Mitt Romney is better equipped than Barack Obama to spur economic growth.
Mitt Romney’s path to winning a greater share of the female voting bloc has been long and arduous.
He trailed the president by 18 percentage points among female voters in a Gallup survey from April, around the time that Democrats were attacking Republicans for “waging a war on women” by supporting legislation that would limit insurance coverage for contraceptives.
That’s when Mitt Romney’s advisers decided to step up the visibility of his wife, Ann, on the campaign trail to try and make Romney more relatable as a husband and a father.
The campaign also organized “Women for Romney” grassroots groups in battleground states across the country and began cutting dozens of television ads that featured clips of Ann talking about Mitt Romney’s “softer” side.
The strategy has helped Mitt Romney slowly chip away at Barack Obama’s lead among female voters and after the president’s decidedly lackluster debate performance earlier this month, Romney appears to be finally closing the gender gap.
As Mitt Romney looks to maintain the progress he’s made among female voters, he’s likely to tread lightly on topics such as abortion and birth control during tonight’s debate – and to pivot back to the economy whenever possible.
President Barack Obama, on the other hand, will be looking for every opportunity to remind female voters of the measures he has enacted while in office that target women, such as the Lily Ledbetter Fair Pay Act.
Barack Obama will also be looking for every chance to remind women that that he was raised by a single mom and that he is the father of two daughters.
NEW DEBATE FORMAT
Unlike the first presidential debate, tonight’s debate will be in a “town hall” format, meaning candidates will answer questions from members of an audience, rather than a moderator.
There are 80 audience members total, which were selected by Gallup from a sample of undecided voters who live near the debate’s location in Hempstead on Long Island.
The participants had to submit their questions ahead of time. The debate moderator, CNN’s Candy Crowley, will decide who to call on during the debate based on her reviews of their submitted questions.
The candidates will have two minutes to respond to each question, after which the moderator can ask a follow-up question of her choosing.
The candidates will have one minute to respond to the moderator’s question.
The “town hall” format is designed to be more relaxed and conversational, with the candidates free to walk around the forum instead of remaining confined behind a podium or a desk.
But the format also lends itself to more opportunities for unplanned or candid events, such as the 1992 debate where President George Bush was caught on camera checking his watch.
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