ELECTIONS

Stark contrast between Trump and Biden on display in dueling town halls

Oct 16, 2020, 6:59 AM

Biden Trump Split attack ads electoral college lead...

President Donald Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden. Credit: Getty Images via CNN

    (CNN) — President Donald Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden weren’t on the same stage on Thursday night but two simultaneous town halls managed to clearly lay out the stark differences between the candidates.

Trump and Biden were both forced to answer tough questions as the President vied for an elusive campaign reset while trying to defend his response to the coronavirus pandemic, his embrace of conspiracy theories and his stance on White supremacists under tough questioning from NBC’s Savannah Guthrie.

At the same time, Biden was repeatedly pressed to clarify his position on whether he will support adding members to the Supreme Court, his work on the 1986 and 1994 crime bills and his positions on fracking and the Green New Deal. He was also forced to explain his controversial comment that if Black Americans don’t support him “you ain’t Black.”

The two separate town halls replaced the face-to-face debate that was to take place Thursday night but then was canceled by the Commission on Presidential Debates after Trump contracted the coronavirus and refused to participate in a virtual debate with Biden.

The separation of the two candidates on different networks Thursday night — each in their own sphere with their own moderator — created an even more stark contrast between their personal styles and approaches for voters who flipped back and forth between the two channels.

From the very beginning of the NBC town hall, Trump was an antagonistic participant, interrupting and criticizing the premise of questions from Guthrie — sometimes before she had even finished asking them — and often offering falsehoods as part of his answers. That dynamic immediately created a contentious back-and-forth between Trump and Guthrie that ratcheted up the crackling tension of the NBC event, as she interjected to fact-check his answers or ask if he was serious about his statements.

Trump alternately played victim and aggressor as they parried back and forth at rapid-fire speed. “You always do this,” he said, looking angry during a tense exchange when Guthrie questioned his equivocations about White supremacy. “You’ve done this to me and everybody. … Are you listening? I denounce White supremacy. What’s your next question?” he snapped.

When Guthrie persisted on that subject, Trump complained, “Here we go again.” Guthrie noted that Trump has sometimes sounded “hesitant” about condemning White supremacists. He immediately pivoted to his denunciation of Antifa and “these people on the left that are burning down our cities that are run by Democrats” and demanded why the press doesn’t ask more questions about their activities.

Voters flipping over to Biden’s town hall might have felt like they’d entered a different universe. The former vice president spoke in measured tones during that more policy-heavy event. Unlike the first debate where Trump tried to rattle Biden by interrupting nearly every one of his answers, Biden would listen to the question from ABC’s George Stephanopoulos or a voter and then answer at length, sometimes with long, winding responses.

An unavoidable focus on Covid-19

 

In one of the most news-making moments of the night, the President admitted that he may not have taken a coronavirus test on the day of his debate with Biden, even though he was required to do so by the Commission on Presidential Debates and tested positive for Covid-19 two days later, possibly exposing his opponent and members of the audience — not to mention all the many supporters who attended his subsequent rallies without masks.

When asked about the President’s answer later Thursday evening, Biden noted that he himself had taken another test before attending Thursday night’s town hall — “the deep test” — to make sure he was negative, because he didn’t want to “come here and expose anybody”

“It’s just decency, to be able to determine whether or not you are clear,” Biden said. “I’m less concerned about me than the guys on the cameras … the Secret Service guys you drive up with. All those people.”

Over at the NBC event, Trump again refused to say when his last negative test had been before the debate, claiming he couldn’t remember. He did not express any regret for the Rose Garden event where he nominated Judge Amy Coney Barrett for the Supreme Court on the Saturday before his diagnosis, which is now widely viewed as a “super-spreader” event where attendees were not socially distanced and few wore masks.

He once again brought up that he had attended an event “with the parents of fallen heroes” at the White House the next day, and noted that some of those attendees “came up to me and they would hug me and they would touch me and I’m not going to not let them do it, to be honest with you.”

“I don’t think that’s probably where it was caught, but maybe it was,” Trump added.

“Are you trying to suggest that? Do you believe a grieving military family gave you Covid?” Guthrie asked him, looking incredulous.

“No,” Trump replied, “I don’t know where it came from.”

Though the poor marks for Trump’s handling of the pandemic are creating a huge drag on his reelection chances — particularly with women — he still has refused to change tactics, dismissing the efficacy of masks and continuing to hold huge rallies where there is no social distancing. At least for now, he is also ignoring the ominous signs that another wave of the coronavirus is hitting the US as deaths top 217,000 and cases near 8 million.

On Thursday at the NBC town hall, Trump put forward the false claim that “85% of the people tha wear masks catch it.” In North Carolina, he also falsely said that 99% of people are recovering from coronavirus: “99%. 99 plus, plus.”

Guthrie bluntly told him that the study he was supposedly citing from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention didn’t say what he was claiming it said about masks. Ultimately the President backed down on his objections to masks, stating he was fine with Americans choosing to do wear them.

“Savannah, we’re on the same side,” Trump said at one point. “I say wear the mask, I’m fine with it. I have no problem.”

Biden, in his own town hall, excoriated the President’s response to the pandemic: “He missed enormous opportunities and kept saying things that weren’t true,” the Democratic nominee said, noting that Trump had said the virus would go away by Easter.

The former vice president said there should have been more national standards earlier in the pandemic and that the President should be pushing all Americans to use masks as a way to stop the spread, including by leaning on governors to mandate mask use.

Trump “didn’t talk about what needed to be done because he kept worrying, in my view, about the stock market,” Biden said, referring to Trump’s leadership when the virus first reached US shores. “He worried if he talked about how bad this could be, unless we took these precautionary actions, then, in fact, the market would go down. And his barometer of success of the economy is the market.”

Trump was pressed by Guthrie about the state of his finances and The New York Times reports that he has debts of approximately $421 million, loans that he has personally guaranteed and that will come due in the next four years. Trump nodded when she mentioned the amount of his debts, but then insisted that the newspaper’s numbers are “all wrong” a moment later. In an acknowledgment of his debts, he later said, “$400 million is a peanut.”

He would not tell Guthrie who he owes, but told her that he does not owe money to Russia. When Guthrie asked whether he owes anything to foreign banks, Trump replied: “Not that I know of.”

“I don’t owe money to any of these sinister people,” Trump said, adding that he is “very under-leveraged.”

Biden again dodges on court packing

 

While Biden’s answers were less defensive and more thoughtful, he faced his own difficult moments when he dodged or didn’t directly tackle the questions he was asked.

Biden attempted to clear up his position on “court-packing” — the term for adding justices to the Supreme Court in order to get more sympathetic rulings — after weeks of trying to evade the question.

At the beginning of his answer, Biden reiterated once again that he is “not a fan” of court-packing but said his position will depend on how the Supreme Court confirmation of Barrett is “handled.” Pressed on what he meant, Biden said it would be contingent on if there was a “real” debate on the Senate floor. “I’m open considering what happens from that point on,” he said.

Pressed by ABC’s George Stephanopoulos if voters have a right to know his position, he said, “They do have a right to know where I stand. They have a right to know where I stand before they vote.”

“So you’ll come out with a clear position before Election Day?” Stephanopoulos asked.

“Yes. Depending on how they handle this,” the former vice president said, referring — presumably — to Senate Republicans.

Biden also faced some intense questions from members of the audience. A young Black man in the audience recalled Biden’s flip comment to radio host Charlamagne tha God that if a Black person was struggling to decide between supporting him or Trump, “you ain’t Black.”

“Besides ‘you ain’t Black,’ ” the man asked, how could Biden convince Black voters to take part “in a system that has failed to protect them?”

Biden delivered a lengthy answer that highlighted his work on education, criminal justice, his $70 billion plan for historically Black colleges and universities and his plans to try to create more fairness in the nation’s tax and economic systems to help Black families build more wealth.

“If young Black women and men vote, you can determine the outcome of this election. Not a joke. You can do that,” Biden told his questioner.

It was a long-winded, policy-based answer that didn’t address the anger expressed by some Black voters — when Biden originally made the “you ain’t Black” quip — that he and the Democratic Party might be taking their votes for granted

Trump needs a game-changer but falls on his usual tactics

Trump, who resumed campaign events in recent days, has traveled the country falsely suggesting that he emerged “immune” from his serious bout with the virus, and he has not shown any willingness to change tactics that seem focused on targeting his base, even though he is trailing Biden in national polls and key battleground states.

He doubled down on his baseless theories about voter fraud during Thursday night’s town hall at a time when more than 17 million people have voted.

When Guthrie pointed out that there is no evidence of widespread voter fraud and that Trump’s own FBI director, Christopher Wray, has underscored that point under oath, Trump openly dismissed Wray’s words and said he “is not doing a very good job.”

He continued to seize on instances where a small number of ballots were mishandled, even after Guthrie noted that some 150 million ballots could be cast across the country.

As Guthrie briskly moved the discussion along, Trump refused to disavow a wide array of other conspiracy theories, including about the group known as QAnon. The President claimed not to know what the group believes, even after Guthrie explained the group’s beliefs to him during the town hall and in spite of the fact that he frequently retweets QAnon theories and followers.

“What I do hear about it is they are very strongly against pedophilia. And I agree with that. I mean I do agree with that,” he said.

“But there’s not a satanic pedophile ring –” Guthrie said.

“I have no idea. I know nothing about them,” Trump responded.

“You don’t know that?” Guthrie said.

“No, I don’t know that, and neither do you know that,” Trump said.

This story has been updated with additional developments on Thursday evening.

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2020 Cable News Network, Inc., a WarnerMedia Company. All rights reserved.

We want to hear from you.

Have a story idea or tip? Send it to the KSL NewsRadio team here.

Today’s Top Stories

Elections

And since 2019, Utah's been involved in a pilot program to test the waters of RCV in city (municipa...

Simone Seikaly

Riverton bows out of ranked choice voting as pilot program proceeds

Riverton is opting out of the ranked-choice voting pilot program in Utah. Funding and trust in government are two of the reasons.

12 months ago

FILE - President Joe Biden speaks from the Treaty Room in the White House on April 14, 2021, about ...

ZEKE MILLER AP White House Correspondent

Biden announces 2024 reelection bid: ‘Let’s finish this job’

The president also has multiple policy goals and unmet promises from his first campaign that he's asking voters on giving him another chance to fulfill.

1 year ago

FILE - President Joe Biden speaks about his economic agenda at International Union of Operating Eng...

Mark Jones

Where things stand leading into the 2024 presidential election

Inside Sources breaks down the lates t developments leading into the 2024 presidential election.

1 year ago

cox on the pandemic...

Lindsay Aerts

Governor Spencer Cox is running for reelection

SALT LAKE CITY  — Governor Spencer Cox will seek a 2nd term.  The news was expected in political circles, but the governor has now confirmed it publicly to KSL NewsRadio. “Yes. Yes. Absolutely running for reelection,” Cox said.  He added that his bid for reelection in 2024 would be the only time he would seek […]

1 year ago

The Arizona Court of Appeals has rejected Kari Lake's challenge to the result of the Arizona gubern...

Brian Rokus and Jack Forrest, CNN

Arizona Court of Appeals rejects Kari Lake’s election challenge

  (CNN) — The Arizona Court of Appeals has rejected Kari Lake’s challenge to the result of the Arizona gubernatorial election after she appealed an earlier ruling from the superior court. Lake had requested a declaration from the court that she — and not her opponent, Arizona’s Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs who won the election by about 17,000 votes — […]

1 year ago

Three weeks from Election Day, nearly 2.5 million Americans have already cast their ballots in the...

Mark Jones

Campaigns having difficult time finding younger people to fill staff positions

Campaigns from both political parties are having a difficult time finding younger people to fill positions on the staff.

1 year ago

Sponsored Articles

close up of rose marvel saliva blooms in purple...

Shannon Cavalero

Drought Tolerant Perennials for Utah

The best drought tolerant plants for Utah can handle high elevations, alkaline soils, excessive exposure to wind, and use of secondary water.

Group of cheerful team members high fiving each other...

Visit Bear Lake

How To Plan a Business Retreat in Bear Lake This Spring

Are you wondering how to plan a business retreat this spring? Read our sample itinerary to plan a team getaway to Bear Lake.

Cheerful young woman writing an assignment while sitting at desk between two classmates during clas...

BYU EMBA at the Marriott School of Business

Hear it Firsthand: 6 Students Share Their Executive MBA Experience at BYU’s Marriott School of Business

The Executive MBA program at BYU offers great opportunities. Hear experiences straight from students enrolled in the program.

Skier being towed by a rider on a horse. Skijoring....

Bear Lake Convention and Visitors Bureau

Looking for a New Winter Activity? Try Skijoring in Bear Lake

Skijoring is when someone on skis is pulled by a horse, dog, animal, or motor vehicle. The driver leads the skiers through an obstacle course over jumps, hoops, and gates.

Banner with Cervical Cancer Awareness Realistic Ribbon...

Intermountain Health

Five Common Causes of Cervical Cancer – and What You Can Do to Lower Your Risk

January is National Cervical Cancer Awareness month and cancer experts at Intermountain Health are working to educate women about cervical cancer.

Kid holding a cisco fish at winterfest...

Bear Lake Convention and Visitors Bureau

Get Ready for Fun at the 2023 Bear Lake Monster Winterfest

The Bear Lake Monster Winterfest is an annual weekend event jam-packed full of fun activities the whole family can enjoy.

Stark contrast between Trump and Biden on display in dueling town halls