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After Debate, Election is Over – or Should Be

Bill Press, Tribune Content Agency on

You can bet the farm on this one: In every future campaign, for any office, political strategists will prep candidates for campaign debates by having them watch one video and one video only: Kamala Harris’ performance against Donald Trump.

On Sept. 10, Harris not only destroyed Trump, she gave a master class in political debate. Rule #1: Prepare; do your homework. Rule #2: Come armed with a clear message and, no matter what you’re asked, bang that message home. Rule #3: Figure out how to rattle your opponent and get under his skin. Rule #4: Relax. Smile. Stay Loose. Look like you’re having fun. On every one of those points, Kamala Harris delivered and Donald Trump did not. He was rattled, insulting, obnoxious, and largely incoherent.

No doubt, Harris had done her homework. From the economy, to health care, to immigration, to Ukraine, to abortion, she knew the issues cold. She even offered a new plan to help families and small businesses. While Trump offered nothing but imposing more tariffs, which most economists warn would increase consumer prices. Amazingly, after eight years of promising to replace Obamacare with something better, he admitted he still didn’t have a new plan, just “concepts.”

Harris also came with a message and delivered it forcefully: Enough division, enough name-calling and personal insults, she repeated often, it’s time to “turn the page.” We already know what a mess Trump made of the presidency the first time, and “we’re not going back.” To which, as if on cue, all Trump could do was lie about his record, brag about getting more votes than any other Republican presidential candidate and still refuse to admit that Joe Biden got seven million more votes than he did.

And, boy, did Harris know how to get under Trump’s skin. It was the perfect cat-and-mouse game. Time after time, she baited the trap – and, every time, Trump walked into it: on John McCain; on his multiple felony convictions; on members of his own administration renouncing him; on foreign leaders laughing at him. But nowhere more so than when she talked about crowds leaving his campaign rallies early – in response to which Trump could only sputter and, with no evidence, accuse her of paying people to attend her rallies.

Through it all, Harris kept her cool. My advice: Go back and rewatch at least part of the debate with the sound off. Watch them side by side. You don’t have to hear what they’re saying to know who’s winning and who’s losing. She listens. She looks at him when she’s talking to him. She smiles or laughs out loud at some of the outrageous things he says. She’s having a good time. While Trump just glowers, never smiles once, looks tired, and clearly can’t wait to exit stage left.

In her opening remarks, Harris warned us we were going to hear a lot of lies from Trump. Still, nobody expected him to go as far as he did. Among his countless lies: Kamala Harris hates Israel; Joe Biden hates Kamala Harris; Harris will take your guns away; Harris still doesn't support fracking; crime’s down everywhere in the world except here; Democrats support executing newborn children; and, my favorite, Haitian immigrants are stealing and eating cats and dogs in Springfield, Ohio. “They’re eating the pets,” he yelled.

After moderator David Muir pointed out that the city manager of Springfield told ABC News there was no truth to that charge, Trump supporters accused Muir and co-moderator Linsey Davis of unfairly fact-checking Trump three times. Ha! If they were really doing their jobs, they would have fact-checked him 300 times.

 

But Trump’s biggest lie was that women could trust him on reproductive rights. And that’s where Harris was at her best: destroying Trump by passionately pointing out that he was the one who killed Roe v. Wade and now brags about it and, if re- elected, would sign a national abortion ban (which Trump did not deny). She owns that issue.

Of course, one debate does not decide an election. If it did, after this week’s debate, this election would, and should, be over. But the debate did serve one important purpose: to prove to any of the 67.1 million watching who had not yet made up their minds that Kamala Harris is fit to be president on day one and that Donald Trump never was and is even less fit today.

On top of which, Taylor Swift’s endorsement is icing on the cake.

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(Bill Press is host of The BillPressPod, and author of 10 books, including: “From the Left: My Life in the Crossfire.” His email address is: bill@billpress.com. Readers may also follow him on Twitter @billpresspod.)

©2024 Tribune Content Agency, LLC.


 

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