Consider This from NPR - During Tuesday's debate, Harris was in command; Trump was incoherent
Episode Date: September 11, 2024Vice President Kamala Harris was dominant during Tuesday's presidential debate in Philadelphia. Former President Donald Trump struggled to stay on topic and a times sounded incoherent. With the race t...o the White House neck and neck will this debate make a difference? For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.Email us at considerthis@npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Tuesday night at 9 o'clock, Donald Trump and Kamala Harris strode onto the debate stage at
the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia. Kamala Harris, what's up? Good to see you. Have
fun. Thank you. In something of the ultimate power move, Harris walked over to Trump and held out
her hand to shake. Some observers noted Trump seemed reluctant or caught off guard by the act of civility. Then it was off to the
races and it became clear what Harris's strategy was, bait the former president. And he latched on
hook, line and sinker. What you'll also notice is that people start leaving his rallies early
out of exhaustion and boredom. She said people start leaving. People don't go to her rallies.
There's no reason to go. And the people that do go, she's busing them in and paying them to be there.
Using precious debate time to talk about crowd size was not the only time that Trump went off message.
In Springfield, they're eating the dogs, the people that came in.
They're eating the cats. They're eating the pets of the people that live there.
Trump is talking there about a debunked conspiracy theory about Haitian migrants eating pets in an Ohio town.
During these moments, when Trump veered off to extremes or repeated falsehoods, the vice president lifted her eyebrows as if to say, really?
Or laughed or propped her hand on her chin with a
smirk. Or sighed, as if in disbelief. As one CNN commentator put it. She was aware, as she must
have been as a prosecutor, that the second you were inside of a courtroom, the jury is looking
at everything you're doing. Muted microphones, doesn't matter. And then there were the times
when Trump seemed to miss his old opponent. Where is our president? We don't even know if he's a president.
And just to clarify here.
They threw him out of a campaign like a dog. We don't even know.
Is he our president? But we have a president that doesn't know he's alive.
Harris's response?
Well, first of all, it's important to remind the former president,
you're not running against Joe Biden, you're running against me. Consider this. Vice President Kamala Harris is widely seen as the winner of Tuesday's debate.
With the election neck and neck, will it make a difference?
From NPR.
Last night's presidential debate between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump was the first and possibly the last time we will see the two candidates face off. Harris seems to have come out on top,
but the race for the White House is in virtual ties across key battleground states. Will this
one debate make a difference? Here to read the tea leaves are NPR senior political editor and
correspondent Domenico Montanaro and NPR media correspondent David Fulkenflik. So now that y'all
have had a chance to sleep on it, Domenico, you first. What was your major takeaway from last night's debate?
I've slept on it and my takeaway has not changed. The debate was not really close. I mean, arguably,
this was the best handling of Trump by any candidate that's debated him in what Kamala
Harris was able to do. You know, she baited him on several things, mentioning the Wharton School
economist not liking his economic plan.
That's, of course, where Trump went to school for undergraduate at the University of Pennsylvania.
As he mentioned, as he would have his way to tell us.
Exactly.
She talked about his crowds, which really derailed him.
There were lots of other examples, and Trump took the bait every single time.
She sort of flipped the script on masculinity.
She really was the alpha in this debate from beginning to end, which is usually his stance at these debates. And Trump did so many things that presidential
debate coaches would tell you not to do. Like, for example, instead of hammering home a rational
point about immigration and a small town not having the resources to respond to an influx of
migrants, he instead used this provocative and debunked conspiracy about immigrants in the U.S.
illegally eating cats and dogs. Never mind about immigrants in the U.S. illegally
eating cats and dogs. Never mind that he got the conspiracy wrong because it was about ducks,
not dogs. And Harris was able to paint him as extreme. I want to ask, speaking of debunking
conspiracies and other things, you know, back in the June debate, the one that was between
Trump and President Biden, we did not hear fact checks in real time from the moderators.
Last night, we did. That was ABC's David Muir and Lindsay Davis. David Fokkenflik,
what impact did that have? Sure. And back in June, you know, CNN traded that for the right
to go after questions that hadn't been answered. In this case, you know, you got to be careful
because if you get it wrong, as we've learned in the past, it becomes a huge partisan focal point. In this instance, I would say the fact checks were,
you know, restrained, focused, measured, quiet, and concise. You know, we talked about the question
of animals and this conspiracy theory. Let's listen to David Muir after Trump accused Haitian
immigrants in a small Ohio city of eating pets. I just want to clarify here, you bring up
Springfield, Ohio,
and ABC News did reach out to the city manager there. He told us there had been no credible reports of specific claims of pets being harmed, injured, or abused by individuals
within the immigrant community. Well, I've seen people on television. Let me just say here,
this is the people on television saying my dog was taken and used for food. So maybe he said that,
and maybe that's a good thing to say for a city
manager. I'm not taking this from television. I'm taking it from the city manager. But the people
on television saying their dog was eaten. So, you know, in past debates, when people
tried fact-checking, they became part of the debate. And then since I'd say this was just a
tempered measure. You know, Amir's tone here was really a thing that stood out to me because
it was pretty lightly fact-checked, right? And Republicans try to cast these fact-checks as bias because there were four last night. All four were
toward things that Trump had said. But it's just a reality of the fact that Trump just says
more things more often that are blatantly false, and he repeats them.
David, stay with the question of bias, perception of bias. How is this being characterized in
media coverage that you're
tracking today? Well, there are kind of three baskets, I would say, of coverage. You've seen
folks who are basically partisans on one side or the other. I'd say you'd seen folks who are
reflecting what we've heard from a colleague, Domenico, last night and today. And I'd say
you'd see those who are so tempered as to be the point of kind of misrepresenting saying,
well, you know, they went at each other in a fiery debate. That didn't really capture what
happened last night. But you know what did happen? Trump unified folks on, you know, say all three
major cable networks, including Fox's Brit Hume, because they were all trying to capture what
Domenico got at. Here was Brit Hume, a former chief political anchor for Fox News and often
a conservative voice. Here's what Britt had to say last night.
Make no mistake about it. Trump had a bad night.
He rose to debate repeatedly when she baited him, something I'm sure his advisers had begged him not to do.
And, you know, we saw in what's called the spin room after the debate,
that's where people representing various campaigns or candidates go in to try to tell reporters how they should think about it and frame it.
Trump entered the room to do his own spin. He didn't feel he could trust surrogates to
make up what he failed to do in the debate itself. Yeah. Domenico, hop back in. Yeah.
Yeah, no. And I was going to say, you know, David mentions this idea of the way that this
has been framed. And sometimes I find that our colleagues really have a difficult time in trying
to just say what they know to be independently, verifiably true. And it's been sort of dubbed
sane washing, which is sort of taking something that Trump says that might
be incoherent, but then making it a subject verb object thing that then is seemingly more rational
and understandable. Also, I have to say about the going into the spin room, not usually the thing
that a presidential candidate who thinks they did well in a debate does.
You would normally delegate that to your surrogates. Yeah. Okay. So, I mean, bottom line, big picture, will this debate change voters' minds?
Will it help people who still haven't made up their minds make up their mind at Domenico?
It certainly could.
I mean, 30% of the people in our survey, in the NPR PBS News Mayor survey, said that they, you know, are going to be looking at this debate as something that could help change their minds. But you have to realize that this is a very, very, very divided country.
Republicans have had an opportunity for almost a decade to move away from Trump, and they have not
chosen to do that. I would not expect that they would after this either. You know, Harris has done
everything right, you could argue, since getting in this race. She's tacked to the middle, raised
half a billion dollars, staffed up, organizing in swing states. Now she out-debated Trump, and she really still could
lose. I mean, this is not just like a could, it's still a coin flip because these seven states,
the seven swing states we're watching closely, are more conservative than the rest of the country
at large. And, you know, I think it is reflective of just how divided we are.
That is NPR's Domenico Montanaro and David Fokkenflik.
Thank you to you both.
You're welcome.
You bet.
This episode was produced by Tyler Bartlam with audio engineering by Neil T.
Valt.
It was edited by Dana Farrington, Emily Kopp and Courtney Dourning.
Our executive producer is Sammy Yenigan. And one more thing, before we go, you can now enjoy the Consider This newsletter.
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I'm Mary Louise Kelly.