2020-10-24

What We Learned from the Final Presidential Debate - The New York Times

What We Learned from the Final Presidential Debate - The New York Times

Presidential Debate: Biden and Trump Leave Voters With a Consequential Choice

Last Updated Oct. 23, 2020

With less than two weeks until Election Day, President Trump and former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. laid out starkly different visions of America as they met on the debate stage for the last time. NBC’s Kristen Welker was the moderator.

We fact-checked the candidates’ claims on the coronavirus, racism, health care and more. Highlights from the debate are below.

Oct. 22, 2020, 11:04 p.m. ET

Kristen Welker kept things under control (the muting helped).

Credit...Erin Schaff/The New York Times

Kristen Welker, the debate’s moderator, began the night with a plea for civility.

“Please,” she instructed the men standing before her, “speak one at a time.”

For the most part, Ms. Welker got what she wanted.

In a high-stakes debut overseeing a presidential debate — taking charge of a candidate matchup that proved a bucking bronco for the last moderator, Chris Wallace of Fox News — Ms. Welker, an NBC anchor and correspondent, managed to restore order to a quadrennial institution that some believed could not be tamed.

Mr. Wallace himself said on Fox News: “Well first of all, I’m jealous. I would’ve liked to have been able to moderate that debate and get a real exchange of views instead of hundreds of interruptions.”

No doubt, she benefited from Trump 2.0: a calmer president arrived onstage Thursday, a contrast with the candidate who derailed the proceedings in Cleveland last month. And she had a technological assist in the form of muted microphones, a novelty installed to keep the exchanges between Mr. Trump and Joseph R. Biden Jr. from going from civics to chaos.

But in a poised and crisp performance, Ms. Welker, 44, succeeded where Mr. Wallace got walloped. Battle-tested by years of covering the Trump White House, she parried with the president and cut him off as needed; Mr. Trump, eager to shed voters’ memories of his unruly performance last month, mostly acquiesced.

Ms. Welker — the first Black woman to moderate a general-election presidential debate since Carole Simpson of ABC in 1992 — entered the evening facing an onslaught of attacks from Mr. Trump, who earlier this week called her “terrible.”

Little of the pressure showed onscreen. Ms. Welker was polite but firm in guiding the discussion, offering chances for brief rebuttals but also taking control when the candidates threatened to go on a harangue, repeatedly urging, “We need to move on.”

Oct. 22, 2020, 10:55 p.m. ET

In closing statements, Trump attacks Biden while Biden offers a vision for the country.

Credit...Amr Alfiky/The New York Times

Kristen Welker’s final question of the debate to each candidate was simple: In your inaugural address, what would you say to Americans who didn’t vote for you?

President Trump, who has done little to articulate a second-term agenda during any of his interviews over the past several months, used his answer to defend his record on the coronavirus crisis and attack Joseph R. Biden Jr.

“I am cutting taxes, and he wants to raise everybody’s taxes, and he wants to put new regulations on everything,” Mr. Trump said. “He will kill it. If he gets in, you will have a depression the likes of which you have never seen. Your 401(k)s will go to hell and it will be a very, very sad day for this country.”

Mr. Biden offered a more traditional closing statement. He recited an uplifting vision for what the United States would look like under a Biden administration and delineated clear goals for what he would do as president.

“I am an American president,” Mr. Biden said he would say. “I represent all of you, whether you voted for me or against me. And I’m going to make sure that you’re represented. I’m going to give you hope.”

Mr. Biden went on to remind voters that the crux of his candidacy is about offering a vision of an America in which people of opposing political persuasions are not constantly at one another’s throats.

“What is on the ballot here is the character of this country,” Mr. Biden said. “Decency, honor, respect, treating people with dignity, making that sure that everyone has an even chance. And I’m going to make sure you get that. You have not been getting it the last four years.”

The responses encapsulated perhaps the most crucial difference between the two presidential campaigns, one that has only become more apparent as the race has transpired: Mr. Trump’s re-election bid has largely revolved around attacking Democrats and Mr. Biden; Mr. Biden, on the other hand, has repeatedly articulated — at least in broad strokes — how the country would be different under his leadership.

Oct. 22, 2020, 10:48 p.m. ET

Asked about the environment and race, Trump did not mention the environment or race.

Environmental justice — a theme in some of Democrats’ discussions during the primaries, focusing on the racially disparate effects of climate change and other environmental issues — made a striking appearance on the general-election debate stage.

As the moderator, Kristen Welker, noted, people of color are much likelier than white people to live near chemical plants and oil refineries, which can cause health problems. Given that President Trump’s administration has lifted restrictions on these facilities, Ms. Welker asked him, “Why should these families give you another four years in office?”

Mr. Trump, in his response, did not once mention the environment, health or racial disparities.

“I have not heard the numbers or the statistics you are saying, but they are making a tremendous amount of money economically,” he said. “I saved it again a number of months ago when oil was crashing because of the pandemic. Say what you want about the relationship, we got Saudi Arabia, Mexico and Russia to cut back, way back. We saved our oil industry and now it is very vibrant. Everyone has very inexpensive gasoline. Remember that.”

Joseph R. Biden Jr., by contrast, gave a detailed response.

“Those people live on what they call fence lines. He doesn’t understand this,” Mr. Biden said. “The fact is, those front line communities, it doesn’t matter what you are paying them. It matters how you keep them safe. What do you do. And you impose restrictions on the pollutants coming out of those fence line communities.”

Mr. Biden briefly discussed the pollution he saw in Claymont, Del., as a child, and the high rates of cancer there. He then repeated his campaign pledge to transition from oil and other fossil fuels to renewable energy.

“In terms of business, that’s the biggest statement. Because basically what he is saying is he is going to destroy the oil industry,” Mr. Trump responded. “Will you remember that, Texas? Will you remember that, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma? Ohio?”

“He takes everything out of context,” Mr. Biden said. “But the point of it is, look, we have to move toward net-zero emissions.”

Oct. 22, 2020, 10:46 p.m. ET

Trump slammed wind power, and Biden said he’d ‘transition’ from oil.

Video
0:00/1:14

TRANSCRIPT

For Biden and Trump, Stark Contrasts on Alternative Energy

Joe Biden said solar and wind energy would provide an economic boost, while President Trump questioned their efficiency and called relying on them “a pipe dream.”

“The fastest-growing industry in America are — is the electric, excuse me, solar energy and wind. He thinks wind causes cancer — windmills. It’s the fastest-growing jobs, and they pay good prevailing wages: 45, 50 bucks an hour. We can grow and we can be cleaner if we go the route I’m proposing.” “President Trump.” “Excuse me.” “Please respond, and then I have two follow-ups.“ “We are energy independent for the first time. We don’t need all of these countries that we had to fight war over because we needed their energy. We are energy independent. I know more about wind than you do. It’s extremely expensive, kills all the birds. It’s very intermittent. It’s got a lot of problems, and they happen to make the windmills in both Germany and China. And the fumes coming up — if you’re a believer in carbon emission — the fumes coming up to make these massive windmills is more than anything that we’re talking about with natural gas, which is very clean. One other thing.” “Find me a scientist who says that.” “Solar, I love solar, but solar doesn’t quite have it yet. It’s not powerful yet to really run our big, beautiful factories that we need to compete with the world. So —” “False.” “It’s all a pipe dream.”

1:14For Biden and Trump, Stark Contrasts on Alternative Energy
Joe Biden said solar and wind energy would provide an economic boost, while President Trump questioned their efficiency and called relying on them “a pipe dream.”CreditCredit...Erin Schaff/The New York Times

One of the most heated exchanges in a much more sedate debate came over the issue of wind power.

President Trump, as he has often done, falsely claimed that Joseph R. Biden Jr. supported the Green New Deal. (Mr. Biden praised it on his website, but has not said he would back the progressive energy and job creation plan.)

“If you look at what he wants to do — if you look at his plan, his environmental plan — you know who developed it? A.O.C. plus three,” he said, a reference to Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and other progressive lawmakers.

(“It’s actually AOC plus 115 because that’s how many House and Senate members have cosponsored the most ambitious climate legislation in American history,” Ms. Ocasio-Cortez responded on Twitter.)

“We are energy-independent,” said Mr. Trump, who has pledged his support for coal and petroleum producers and ridiculed wind and solar energy sources as impractical.

“I know more about wind than you do,” he added. “It is extremely expensive, kills all the birds, it’s very intermittent, it’s got a lot of problems, and they happen to make the windmills in both Germany and China. And the fumes coming up — if you’re a believer in carbon emission — the fumes coming up to make these massive windmills is more than anything that we are talking about with natural gas.”

Mr. Biden replied: “Find me a scientist who says that.”

“I love solar, but solar doesn’t quite have it yet,” the president added. “It is not powerful yet to really run our big, beautiful factories that we need to compete with the world.”

Later, Mr. Biden said he “would transition from the oil industry” because “the oil industry pollutes significantly” — a fairly conventional answer in keeping with Obama administration policy and with the automotive industry, which has been moving toward high-efficiency or alternative-fuel vehicles for decades.

But Mr. Trump, eager for anything that could give him an edge in energy-producing battlegrounds, responded directly to the camera: “Will you remember that, Texas? Will you remember that, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma? Ohio?”

After the debate, speaking to reporters, Mr. Biden expanded on his remarks. “We’re getting rid of the subsidies for fossil fuels, but we’re not getting rid of fossil fuels for a long time,” he said, according to a pool report.

Kate Bedingfield, a deputy campaign manager on Mr. Biden’s team, also stressed the part of Mr. Biden’s answer in which he had referred to subsidies. “He was very clear in his answer, he was saying that he was going to eliminate oil subsidies,” she said in a call with reporters.

“I think, you know, writ large, the idea of transitioning off of oil is nothing new,” she added, invoking George W. Bush’s remarks on the subject in 2006.

Oct. 22, 2020, 10:35 p.m. ET

Biden calls Trump ‘one of the most racist presidents we’ve had in modern history.’

President Trump came to the debate ready with his regular wrap on race when asked to explain his description of “Black Lives Matter” as a symbol of hate: He claimed he had done more than any president since Abraham Lincoln for African-Americans, and he called himself the “least racist person in this room.” (Never mind that the moderator of the debate, Kristen Welker, is a Black woman.)

But he has limited achievements to back up the ludicrous claims he regularly makes as part of his stump speech. He typically points to criminal justice reform and his support for historically Black colleges and universities as the twin backbones of his support for Black Americans. On Thursday night, he also talked about creating opportunity zones.

It’s all been part of an effort to shave off a few points of Mr. Biden’s support among Black voters. Mr. Trump won just 8 percent of Black voters in 2016 and his campaign wants to increase his margin by a few points.

Mr. Biden, however, appeared to take him by surprise by mocking the claims. “Abraham Lincoln here is one of the most racist presidents we’ve had in modern history,” Mr. Biden said. “He pours fuel on every single racist fire.”

Mr. Trump has refused to denounce white supremacists and in recent days even reverted to calling President Barack Obama by his middle name, “Hussein,” a callback to the racist birther conspiracy theory that helped launch Mr. Trump into the national political discourse.

Mr. Trump has never apologized for spending tens of thousands of dollars on full-page newspaper ads calling for the return of the death penalty to punish the Black and Latino teenagers, known as the Central Park Five, who were wrongfully accused of raping a white woman in Central Park in 1989. Instead, he doubled down.

And since taking office, he has frequently stoked racial tensions, elevating the voices of white nationalists when he appeared to defend their actions after a deadly confrontation with liberal protesters in Charlottesville, Va.

Onstage, Mr. Biden said, “this guy is a dog whistle about as big as a foghorn,” noting that at the previous debate he had told the Proud Boys to “stand by.”

“I said not since Abraham Lincoln has anybody done what I’ve done for the Black community,” Mr. Trump said, correcting him. “I didn’t say ‘I’m Abraham Lincoln.’ I said not since Abraham Lincoln has anybody done what I’ve done for the Black community.”

He also hit Mr. Biden for supporting the 1994 crime bill, which “put tens of thousands of Black men, mostly, in jail.”

Mr. Biden conceded that his support for that bill was “a mistake.”

Oct. 22, 2020, 10:33 p.m. ET

Trump, the current president, tries to paint himself as the outsider against Biden.

Four years ago, Donald J. Trump ran for and won the presidency by arguing that he wasn’t like any other politician — and he wasn’t.

Now trailing badly with less than two weeks to go before Americans will decide whether he will be re-elected, Mr. Trump used the final debate with former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. to try to paint Mr. Biden as an incumbent-type figure, a regular politician while describing himself, after nearly four years in the White House, as the outsider.

“Just a typical politician,” Mr. Trump sneered at Mr. Biden early in the debate. When Mr. Biden described how he’d deal with criminal justice reform, Mr. Trump snapped, “Why didn’t you do it” while in office. “You had eight years with Obama. You know why, Joe? Because you’re all talk and no action.”

Describing himself as the outsider, while not consistent with his status as the sitting president, is perhaps Mr. Trump’s last best card to play in the 2020 campaign. The coalition that elected him four years ago wanted a president who would shake up the old ways of Washington, and Mr. Trump has used the final debate to argue, again, that he would do that while Mr. Biden would not.

The only problem with this argument is that Mr. Trump is, at least for now, the president of the United States.

Oct. 22, 2020, 10:28 p.m. ET

Addressing systemic racism, Kristen Welker asks the candidates about ‘The Talk.’

Credit...Erin Schaff/The New York Times

Kristen Welker, the second Black woman to moderate a presidential debate on her own, asked the candidates directly on Thursday about an experience that Black families have every day, but that is rarely discussed on a national debate stage: The Talk, the conversation that Black parents must have with their children, telling them how to behave so police officers will not shoot them. Mr. Biden responded by talking about his daughter, who is a social worker.

“I never had to tell my daughter, if she’s pulled over, make sure she puts — for a traffic stop — put both hands on top of the wheel and don’t reach for the glove box, because someone may shoot you,” he said. “But a Black parent, no matter how wealthy or how poor they are, has to teach their child: When you are walking down the street, don’t have a hoodie on when you go across the street. Making sure that you in fact, if you get pulled over, just ‘Yes sir,' ‘no sir,’ hands on top of the wheel.”

He continued: “The fact of the matter is, there is institutional racism in America.”

President Trump responded with one of his favorite claims: that he has done more for Black people than any president in American history, “with the exception of Abraham Lincoln, possible exception.” His actions do not remotely back up this claim.

Mr. Trump pointed, as he often does, to the criminal justice reform bill he signed, and to the 1994 crime bill that Mr. Biden signed. But, while he said he understood Black parents’ fear, his administration has repeatedly attacked racial justice movements, and he has refused to directly condemn white supremacists.

Just two weeks ago, in the vice-presidential debate, Vice President Mike Pence claimed it was offensive to say there is systemic racism in the United States.

Oct. 22, 2020, 10:27 p.m. ET

Biden and Trump spar about their respective histories on criminal justice.

Credit...Amr Alfiky/The New York Times

President Trump and Joseph R. Biden Jr. sparred over each other’s history on criminal justice, with each accusing the other of being too tough on crime.

Mr. Trump, who has campaigned on his fealty to America’s police departments, played up his commutations and signing of a criminal justice reform law while slamming Mr. Biden for pushing the 1994 crime bill.

“Your crime bill, the super predators,” Mr. Trump said. “Nobody has done more for the Black community than Donald Trump. And if you look, with the exception of Abraham Lincoln, possible exception, but the exception of Abraham Lincoln, nobody has done what I’ve done.”

Mr. Biden returned the rhetorical fire, citing Mr. Trump’s long history of incendiary and racist remarks about Black men whom he has said were responsible for plagues of crime in American cities.

“He talked about marauding gangs, young gangs and the people who are going to marauding our cities,” Mr. Biden said. “This is a guy, who in the Central Park Five, five innocent Black kids, he continued to push for making sure they got the death penalty. None of them were guilty of the crimes that were suggested.”

Oct. 22, 2020, 10:25 p.m. ET

Trump tries to rattle Biden, who responds with a disciplined performance.

Credit...Erin Schaff/The New York Times

President Trump has tried to rattle Joseph R. Biden Jr. by attacking his family — and trotting out a former business associate of his son Hunter Biden before the debate.

But the former vice president has so far delivered a disciplined debate performance consistently targeting issues that voters care most about: wages, the coronavirus and health care.

“You know who I am, you know who he is,” Mr. Biden said.

While Mr. Trump repeatedly tried to steer the conversation back to the younger Mr. Biden’s overseas dealings, the former vice president — known for his dogged debate preparations — showed his conversance in a detailed policy response.

The contrast with Mr. Trump’s more visceral approach, which veered into personal attacks and featured familiar talking points from his interviews, tweets and rallies, was starker than in the first debate — simply because the new rules, with microphones muted for each candidate at times, allowed both to finish their sentences.

Mr. Biden’s approach was especially apparent when the two jousted over the Affordable Care Act, with Mr. Trump suggesting, as he has done repeatedly without providing concrete details, that he would create some kind of a replacement for the program if he succeeds in repealing it.

“Vice President Biden, yes, this is for you: Your health plan calls for building on Obamacare,” asked the moderator, Kristen Welker. “So my question is, what is your plan if the law is ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court?”

“What I’m going to do is pass Obamacare with a public option,” Mr. Biden said. “It will become Bidencare. The public option is an option that says that, if you qualify for Medicaid you and do not have the wherewithal in your state to get Medicaid, you automatically are enrolled, providing competition for insurance companies. That’s what’s going to happen. Secondly, we’re going to make sure we reduce the premiums and reduce drug prices by making sure that there’s competition that does not exist now, by allowing Medicare to negotiate drug prices with the insurance companies.”

When the president diverted a question about China policy into an attack on Hunter Biden, the elder Mr. Biden shot back: “There’s a reason why he’s bringing up all of this malarkey. There’s a reason for it. He does not want to talk about the substantive issues.”

Oct. 22, 2020, 10:17 p.m. ET

Biden slams Trump over migrant family separations at the border.

Video
0:00/0:37

TRANSCRIPT

Biden Says Family Separations Have Made U.S. a ‘Laughingstock’

Joseph R. Biden criticized President Trump for separating families at the southern border, while the president said he had a plan to reunite them.

“Do have a plan to reunite the kids?” “Yes, we’re working on it very, we’re trying very hard. But a lot of these kids come out without the parents. They come over through cartels and through coyotes and through gangs.” “Five hundred-plus kids came with parents. They separated them at the border to make it a disincentive to come to begin with. Big, real tough. We’re really strong. And guess what? They cannot — it’s not, coyotes didn’t bring them over. Their parents were with them. They got separated from their parents. And it makes us a laughingstock and violates every notion of who we are as a nation.”

0:36Biden Says Family Separations Have Made U.S. a ‘Laughingstock’
Joseph R. Biden criticized President Trump for separating families at the southern border, while the president said he had a plan to reunite them.CreditCredit...Erin Schaff/The New York Times

Joseph R. Biden Jr. and President Trump sparred over family separations at the southern border, after an explosive report this week revealed the United States cannot locate the parents of more than 500 migrant children.

Asked repeatedly if he had a plan to reunite the children with their parents, Mr. Trump initially dodged the question before misleadingly saying his administration was “working on it.”

“We’re trying very hard. But a lot of these kids come out without the parents,” Mr. Trump then claimed. “They come over through cartels and through coyotes and through gangs.”

In fact, the Trump administration resisted providing information to court-appointed lawyers.

Mr. Trump also falsely insisted that the separated children were “so well taken care of” — an assertion that flies in the face of images and recordings that are widely available.

Mr. Biden accused Mr. Trump of separating children at the border to discourage migrants from trying to cross the border.

“Coyotes didn’t bring them over. Their parents were with them. They got separated from their parents,” Mr. Biden said, dismissing Mr. Trump’s claim. “And it makes us a laughingstock and violates every notion of who we are as a nation.”

Mr. Biden also referred to family separations as “criminal,” as Mr. Trump repeatedly asked Mr. Biden, “Who built the cages?”

Mr. Trump has repeatedly tried to cast former President Barack Obama as instigating the practice of family separations, but the Obama administration only broke up families under rare circumstances. The Trump administration’s “zero tolerance” policy, on the other hand, called for criminal prosecution of everyone who entered the country illegally.

Mr. Trump signed an executive order that tried to end the practice of family separation after widespread condemnation from lawmakers in both parties, immigration activists and the United Nations.

Oct. 22, 2020, 10:14 p.m. ET

Biden says first responders should get a $15 minimum wage. Trump thinks it should be up to states.

Video
0:00/0:48

TRANSCRIPT

$15 Minimum Wage Spurs Dissent Between Trump and Biden

Joe Biden cited emergency responders as among those who “deserve a minimum wage of $15” an hour, while President Trump said states should decide the rate.

“I want to get your reaction.” “He said we have to help our small businesses by raising the minimum wage? That’s not helping. I think it should be a state option. Alabama is different than New York. New York is different from Vermont. Some places, $15 is not so bad. In other places, other states, $15 would be — ” “OK, President Trump, thank you. Quick response, Vice President Biden. “No one should work two jobs, one job and be below poverty. People are making six, seven, eight bucks an hour. These first responders we all clap for as they come down the street because they’ve allowed us to make it. What’s happening? They deserve a minimum wage of $15, anything below that puts you below the poverty level. And there is no evidence that when you raise the minimum wage, businesses go out of business. That is simply not true.”

0:47$15 Minimum Wage Spurs Dissent Between Trump and Biden
Joe Biden cited emergency responders as among those who “deserve a minimum wage of $15” an hour, while President Trump said states should decide the rate.CreditCredit...Amr Alfiky/The New York Times

The two candidates laid out vastly differing positions on the federal minimum wage, with Joseph R. Biden Jr. advocating for a $15 minimum, including for first responders across the country, and President Trump arguing that states should decide.

“These first responders, we clap for as they come down the street because they allowed us to make it,” Mr. Biden said. “What is happening? They deserve a minimum wage of $15.”

Mr. Trump said that raising the minimum wage “should be a state option. Alabama is different from New York. New York is different from Vermont. Every state is different. It should be a state option. We have to help our small businesses.”

Reminded that Mr. Trump recently said he would consider raising the federal minimum wage, which is currently $7.25 an hour, Mr. Trump seemed to wiggle out of his previous statement. “I would consider it to an extent,” he said. “But not to a level that is going to put all these businesses out of business. It should be a state option.”

Oct. 22, 2020, 10:10 p.m. ET

Trump ‘thinks he is running against somebody else,’ Biden says.

Joseph R. Biden Jr. made explicit in two lines on Thursday what has been a theme of the entire general election campaign: President Trump has been trying to run not against Mr. Biden’s positions, but against the positions of other Democrats whom Mr. Biden beat in the primary.

“He thinks he is running against somebody else,” Mr. Biden said. “I beat all those other people because I disagreed with them.”

Joe Biden he is running against,” he said, enunciating his name and pointing at himself.

Throughout a segment focused on health care, Mr. Trump claimed repeatedly that Mr. Biden supported “socialized medicine” à la Senator Bernie Sanders’s “Medicare for all” plan.

Mr. Biden does not support Medicare for all or any other single-payer plan; rather, he supports a government-run public option alongside private insurance. This was one of the biggest dividing lines in the Democratic primary.

As other Republicans have done, Mr. Trump also tried to cast Mr. Biden as beholden to the left-wing policy views of his running mate, Senator Kamala Harris, even though Ms. Harris was herself one of the more moderate candidates in the primary.

“He wants socialized medicine, and it’s not that he wants it — his vice president, I mean, she is more liberal than Bernie Sanders and wants it even more,” Mr. Trump said.

Ms. Harris is not to the left of Mr. Sanders on health care.

Oct. 22, 2020, 10:09 p.m. ET

Trump argues, baselessly, that Nancy Pelosi is standing in the way of a coronavirus relief deal.

President Trump said there had not been a federal deal on economic relief to help businesses and local governments struggling with an economy warped by the coronavirus because Speaker Nancy Pelosi would not agree to one — a proposition that does not comport with recent history.

“Nancy Pelosi does not want to approve it,” Mr. Trump said. “We are ready, willing, and able to do something. Don’t forget, we have already approved three plans, and it’s gone through — including the Democrats, in all fairness. This one she does not want, it’s near the election, because she thinks it helps her politically. I think it hurts her politically.”

Ms. Pelosi has been negotiating for weeks to try to reach a deal with Steven Mnuchin, Mr. Trump’s Treasury secretary, but Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, has said he does not have the votes to pass any deal through the Republican-controlled Senate. There is no evidence Mr. Trump has called recalcitrant Republican senators to push them to approve a deal.

The Democratic-controlled House passed a $3 trillion aid package in May, legislation that has never gotten a hearing in the Senate.

Mr. Biden said such relief was urgently needed to help governments recover from the economic slowdown.

“The states have to balance their budgets, so they have to fire firefighters, teachers, first responders, law enforcement officers, so they can keep their cities and counties running,” Mr. Biden said. “He will not support that. They have not done a thing for them. And Mitch McConnell said, let them go bankrupt. Let them go bankrupt. Come on, what’s the matter with these guys?”

Oct. 22, 2020, 10:03 p.m. ET

Biden slams Trump on health insurance and rebrands his own plan as ‘Bidencare.’

Video
0:00/0:27

TRANSCRIPT

Trump and Biden Differ on Health Care Plans

President Trump and Joe Biden took different tacks on a health care plan to deal with pre-existing conditions.

“Pre-existing conditions will always stay. What I would like to do is a much better health care, much better. We’ll always protect people with pre-existing. So I’d like to terminate Obamacare, come up with a brand new, beautiful health care.” “He’s been talking about this for a long time. There is no — he’s never come up with a plan. I guess we’re going to get the pre-existing condition plan the same time we get the infrastructure plan that we’ve been waiting for since ’17, ’18, ’19 and ’20.”

0:27Trump and Biden Differ on Health Care Plans
President Trump and Joe Biden took different tacks on a health care plan to deal with pre-existing conditions.CreditCredit...Amr Alfiky/The New York Times

Joseph R. Biden Jr. took the issue of health care to the debate stage on Thursday, elevating his pitch to expand the Affordable Care Act as he swatted aside President Trump’s claim that he supported “socialized medicine.”

Asked what he would do if the Supreme Court overturned the Affordable Care Act as Mr. Trump has promised, Mr. Biden said he would “pass Obamacare with a public option,” using the health care law’s familiar moniker, and then he coined a fresh one for his plan: “Bidencare.”

Mr. Biden also took aim at Mr. Trump’s health care plan, which the president has yet to unveil.

“He’s been talking about this for a long time,” Mr. Biden said. “He’s never come up with a plan. I guess we’re going to get the pre-existing condition plan the same time we get the infrastructure plan.”

Mr. Trump, for his part, repeated a familiar line of attack, accusing Mr. Biden of supporting “socialized medicine.”

“He wants socialized medicine,” Mr. Trump said, then pivoted to accuse Mr. Biden’s running mate, Senator Kamala Harris, of being “more liberal than Bernie Sanders” on health care.

“Bernie Sanders wants it. The Democrats want it,” Mr. Trump said, an apparent reference to the single-payer, universal health care plan championed by Mr. Sanders known as “Medicare for all.”

Biden rebuffed Mr. Trump’s barb. “He’s a very confused guy,” Mr. Biden said of Mr. Trump. “He thinks he’s running against somebody else. He’s running against Joe Biden. I beat all those other people because I disagreed with them.”

Oct. 22, 2020, 10:01 p.m. ET

Biden likens Trump’s North Korea approach to appeasement of Hitler before World War II.

Video
0:00/2:19

TRANSCRIPT

Biden Denounces Trump’s Relationship with Kim Jong-un

Joseph R. Biden Jr. criticized President Trump for his ties to North Korea’s leader, whom he called a “thug” and compared to Adolf Hitler.

“North Korea recently rolled out its biggest-ever intercontinental ballistic missile and continues to develop its nuclear arsenal. Do you see that as a betrayal of the relationship you forged?” “No. I have a very good relationship with him. Different kind of a guy, but he probably thinks the same thing about me. We have a different kind of a relationship. We have a very good relationship. And there’s no war.” “Vice President Biden, to you: North Korea conducted four nuclear tests under the Obama administration. Why do you think you would be able to rein in this persistent threat?” “Because I’d make it clear, which we were making clear to China — they had to be part of the deal. Because here’s the route. I made it clear, and as a spokesperson in the administration, when I went to China, they said: Why are you moving your missile defense up so close? Why are you moving more forces here? Why do you continue to do military maneuvers with South Korea? I said, because North Korea is a problem, and we’re going to continue to do it so we can control them. We’re going to make sure we can control them and make sure they cannot hurt us. And so if you want to do something about it, step up and help. If not, it’s going to continue. What has he done? He’s legitimized North Korea. He’s talked about his good buddy who’s a thug, a thug, and he talks about how we’re better off. And they are, have much more capable missiles able to reach U.S. territory much more easily than they ever did before.” “Let me follow up with you, Vice President Biden. You’ve said you wouldn’t meet with Kim Jong-un without preconditions. Are there any conditions under which you would meet with him?” “On the condition that he would agree that he would be drawing down his nuclear capacity, to get — the Korean peninsula should be a nuclear-free zone.” “They tried to meet with him. He wouldn’t do it. He didn’t like Obama. He didn’t like him. He wouldn’t do it.” “OK, got to give him a chance to respond to that —” “I know for a fact, they tried. He wouldn’t do it. And that’s OK. You know what? North Korea, we’re not in a war. We have a good relationship. You know, people don’t understand: Having a good relationship — ” “President Trump, we have to move on.” “— with leaders of other countries is a good thing.” “We have a lot of questions to get to.” “Yes.” “That’s like saying we had a good relationship with Hitler before he, in fact, invaded Europe, the rest of Europe — come on. The reason he would not meet with President Obama is because President Obama said, we’re going to talk about denuclearization. We’re not going to legitimize you. We’re going to continue to push stronger and stronger sanctions on you. That’s why he wouldn’t meet with us.”

2:18Biden Denounces Trump’s Relationship with Kim Jong-un
Joseph R. Biden Jr. criticized President Trump for his ties to North Korea’s leader, whom he called a “thug” and compared to Adolf Hitler.CreditCredit...Amr Alfiky/The New York Times

Joseph R. Biden Jr. shot down President Trump’s boast that he had defused a dangerous situation on the Korean Peninsula by cultivating a good relationship with Kim Jong-un, likening Mr. Trump’s actions to the appeasement of Adolf Hitler before World War II.

The moderator of Thursday’s debate, Kristen Welker, asked Mr. Biden, referring to the North Korean leader: “Are there any conditions under which you would meet with him?”

“On the condition that he would agree that he would be drawing down his nuclear capacity, to get the Korean Peninsula to be a nuclear-free zone,” Mr. Biden responded.

“He didn’t like Obama,” Mr. Trump shot back. “He didn’t like him. He wouldn’t do it. I know for a fact. They tried. He wouldn’t do it. And that’s OK. You know what, North Korea? We’re not in a war. We have a good relationship. People don’t understand — having a good relationship with leaders of other countries is a good thing.”

Mr. Biden pounced:

“We had a great relationship with Hitler before he, in fact, invaded Europe, the rest of Europe,” he said.

Oct. 22, 2020, 9:53 p.m. ET

As Biden talks about struggling families, Trump dismisses him as a ‘typical politician.’

After several rounds of back-and-forth over President Trump’s tax returns and the Biden family’s business practices, former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. made the same pivot that was successful in the first debate: He tried to make the debate about which man would be a better president for American families struggling with the coronavirus or the economy.

“There’s a reason he’s bringing up all of this malarkey,” Mr. Biden said, using his signature description for nonsense.

“It’s not about his family and my family. It’s about your family, and your family is hurting badly,” he added. “If you are a middle-class family, you are getting hurt badly right now. You’re sitting at the kitchen table this morning deciding, well we cannot get new tires, they are bald, because we have to wait another month or so. Or are we going to be able to pay the mortgage? Or, who is going to tell her she cannot go back to community college?”

He went on: “ Middle-class families like the one I grew up with are in trouble. We should be talking about you, but that’s the last thing he wants to talk about.”

If Mr. Biden was trying to set a trap for the president, Mr. Trump walked right into it, dismissing the concerns of families coping with economic stress.

“Let’s get off this China thing, then he looks to family, around the table, and everything, just your typical politician,” Mr. Trump said. “That’s why I got elected. Let’s get off the subject of China. Let’s talk sitting around the table. Come on, Joe, you can do better.”

Oct. 22, 2020, 9:52 p.m. ET

Trump lashes out over Hunter Biden. Biden hits back, calling Giuliani ‘a Russian pawn.’

Credit...Erin Schaff/The New York Times

About 30 minutes into the debate, President Trump pulled out his “in case of emergency” hit on Joseph R. Biden Jr.: unloading a series of personal and baseless attacks at Mr. Biden over his son Hunter Biden’s business dealings.

He brought it up via a relatively new character in the plot, Tony Bobulinski.

Mr. Bobulinski is a former associate of the younger Mr. Biden who says he was included on emails from 2017 with him that have emerged in conservative news outlets in recent days. In one of them, Hunter Biden reportedly described a financial agreement in which portions of an investment with a Chinese company would be reserved for “the big guy.”

Mr. Bobulinski sent an email to several news outlets on Wednesday night, saying that “the big guy” referred to the former vice president.

On Thursday night, Mr. Trump pressed Mr. Biden from the debate stage to address the story he has wanted to elevate in the news media in order to paint his opponent as corrupt. “Russia was paying you a lot of money, and they probably still are,” he claimed. “What came out today is worse, all of the emails, the horrible emails of the money you were raking in, you and your family. I think you owe an explanation to the American people.”

Trump’s behavior marked another low point for presidential debates, as he targeted the family of his rival with insinuations meant to throw Mr. Biden off balance. Mr. Biden responded by bringing up the tax returns Mr. Trump has refused to release since his 2016 campaign.

“I have not taken a penny from any foreign source in my life,” Mr. Biden said. “We learned that this president paid 50 times the tax in China, has a secret bank account with China, does business in China, and in fact is talking about me taking money?”

He added: “China is building a new road to a golf course you have overseas, so what’s going on? Release your tax return or stop talking about corruption.”

Mr. Biden also accused Rudolph W. Giuliani, the president’s personal lawyer, as someone who was “being used as a Russian pawn, he is being fed information that is not true.”

Later, he tried to pivot away from the personal attacks altogether, and bring the conversation back to the voters. “It’s not about his family and my family,” he said. “It’s about your family.”

Mr. Trump dismissed the pivot as that of a “typical politician.”

Oct. 22, 2020, 9:44 p.m. ET

Trump says again, falsely, that Robert Mueller cleared him of wrongdoing.

President Trump returned in Thursday night’s debate to two old falsehoods: that the Obama administration spied on his 2016 campaign and that Robert S. Mueller III’s investigation cleared him on accusations of collusion with Russia.

“I was put through a phony witch hunt for three years,” Mr. Trump said. “It started before I even got elected. They spied on my campaign. No president should ever have to go through what I went through. Let me just say this — Mueller and 18 angry Democrats and F.B.I. agents all over the place spent $48 million. They went through everything I had, including my tax returns, and they found absolutely no collusion and nothing wrong.”

The spying accusations are baseless, and Mr. Mueller’s report was not the “exoneration” Mr. Trump has claimed. Mr. Mueller has said that charging the president with a crime was not an option because of guidance that a sitting president cannot be indicted.

Oct. 22, 2020, 9:43 p.m. ET

Trump does not condemn Russia and Iran for trying to interfere in the election.

President Trump refused to condemn Russia and Iran for interfering in the presidential election, as he sparred with Joseph R. Biden Jr. about efforts by foreign countries to sway the election results a day after top American security officials said the two countries had both obtained American voter registration data.

“There has been nobody tougher on Russia than Donald Trump,” Mr. Trump said, referring to himself in the third person in response to a question from Kristen Welker, the debate moderator, about what he would do in a second term to combat election interference from foreign adversaries.

His remarks came after Mr. Biden’s response to a similar question about election interference, during which he criticized Mr. Trump for declining to denounce President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia.

“I don’t understand why this president is unwilling to take on Putin when he’s actually paying bounties to kill American soldiers in Afghanistan, when he’s engaged in activities that are trying to destabilize all of NATO,” Mr. Biden said.

Drawing a stark contrast to Mr. Trump, Mr. Biden vowed to ensure that any country that tried to influence American elections would “pay a price if I’m elected.”

“Any country that interferes with us will in fact pay a price because they’re affecting our sovereignty,” he said.

Mr. Biden also briefly attacked Rudolph W. Giuliani, Mr. Trump’s personal lawyer and a former mayor of New York, accusing him of “being used as a Russian pawn” — apparently alluding to recent reports that the White House was warned last year that Russian intelligence officers were using Mr. Giuliani to convey Russian disinformation aimed at undermining Mr. Biden’s presidential campaign.

Oct. 22, 2020, 9:42 p.m. ET

Trump pledges to release his taxes, again, but does not say when.

President Trump — under fire from Joseph R. Biden Jr. over his low tax payments — again vaguely promised to release his tax returns once a federal audit was completed.

“I released all my tax returns. Twenty-two years — go look at them,” Mr. Biden said. “You have not released a single solitary year of your tax return. What are you hiding? Why are you unwilling? The foreign countries are paying you a lot. Russia is paying you a lot. China is paying you a lot. And your hotels, your businesses all around the country, all around the world. China is building a new road to a golf course you have overseas, so what’s going on? Release your tax return or stop talking about corruption.”

Mr. Trump, who had been trying to bait the former vice president over his son’s business activities, responded by claiming he would soon release his taxes.

“First of all, I called my accountants under audit,” he said. “I’m going to release them as soon as we can. I want to do it. And it will show how successful, how great this company is. But much more importantly than that, people were saying $750. I asked them a week ago. I said, what did I pay? They said sir, you prepaid tens of millions of dollars. I prepaid my tax.”

Oct. 22, 2020, 9:38 p.m. ET

Trump called Fauci ‘a disaster.’ Now he says they ‘get along very well.’

Credit...Michelle Gustafson for The New York Times

President Trump dismissed the counsel of Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, as he defended his own record on the coronavirus by attacking others.

Asked by the moderator, Kristen Welker, why he described Dr. Fauci as “a disaster” earlier this week, Mr. Trump ticked through what he described as Dr. Fauci’s mistakes in handling the pandemic.

“I’m listening to all of them, including Anthony, I get along very well with Anthony, but he did say ‘do not wear a mask,’” Mr. Trump said. “He did say, as you know, this is not going to be a problem. I think he is a Democrat, but that is OK.”

Mr. Biden responded by reiterating that Mr. Trump had been aware of the seriousness of the virus but chose to dismiss it, as Mr. Trump told the journalist Bob Woodward months ago for his book, because he wanted to keep Americans upbeat about it.

“Think about what the president knew in January and didn’t tell the American people,” Mr. Biden said. “He went on record and said to one of your colleagues, recorded, that he knew how dangerous it was but he did not want to tell us, he didn’t want to tell us because he did not want us to panic. Americans do not panic. He panicked.”

Oct. 22, 2020, 9:33 p.m. ET

Trump falsely claims New York is a ‘ghost town’ in its death throes.

Video
0:00/1:06

TRANSCRIPT

Trump and Biden Disagree on How to Safely Reopen Businesses

Joseph R. Biden Jr. promoted social distancing and plexiglass dividers, while President Trump said such measures had turned New York City into a “ghost town.”

“We ought to be able to walk and chew gum at the same time. We ought to be able to safely open. But they need resources to open. You need to be able to, for example, if you’re going to open a business, have social distancing within the business. You need to have, if you have a restaurant, you need to have plexiglass dividers so people cannot infect one another. You need to be in a position where you can take testing rapidly and know whether a person is in fact infected. You need to be able to trace. You need to be able to provide all the resources that are needed to do this.” “If you go and look at what’s happened to New York, it’s a ghost town, it’s a ghost town. And when you talk about plexiglass, these are restaurants that are dying. These are businesses with no money. Putting up plexiglass is unbelievably expensive, and it’s not the answer. I mean, you’re going to sit there in a cubicle wrapped around with plastic? It’s — these are businesses that are dying, Joe. You can’t do that to people. You just can’t. Take a look at New York and what’s happened to my wonderful city for so many years. I loved it, it was vibrant. It’s dying. Everyone’s leaving New York.”

1:06Trump and Biden Disagree on How to Safely Reopen Businesses
Joseph R. Biden Jr. promoted social distancing and plexiglass dividers, while President Trump said such measures had turned New York City into a “ghost town.”CreditCredit...Amr Alfiky/The New York Times

President Trump falsely cast New York as a “ghost town” that is “dying” as a result of shutdowns imposed to fight the coronavirus, and spoke in startlingly dismissive terms about relatively simple measures like installing plexiglass dividers in restaurants.

“When you talk about plexiglass, these are restaurants that are dying, businesses with no money,” Mr. Trump said. “Putting up plexiglass is unbelievably expensive, and it’s not the answer. You are going to sit there in a cubicle wrapped in plastic? These are businesses that are dying. You cannot do that to people.”

His comment came in response to Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s arguing that policymakers did not have to make a binary choice between combating the coronavirus and protecting the economy.

“We ought to be able to walk and chew gum at the same time,” Mr. Biden said. “We ought to be able to safely open, but you need resources to open. You need to be able to, for example if you are going to open a business, have social distancing in the business. If you have a restaurant, you need plexiglass dividers so people cannot infect one another. You need to be in a position to take testing rapidly and know whether a person is in fact infected.”

Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo of New York, appearing on “The Late Show” after the debate, hit back at Mr. Trump’s criticism.

“New York has a lower infection rate than the White House,” he said.

Oct. 22, 2020, 9:33 p.m. ET

Biden, on offense, offers a detailed takedown of Trump’s response to the coronavirus.

Joseph R. Biden Jr. — finding himself in a conventional debate against a more restrained President Trump in the early stages of Thursday’s face-off — went on offense by offering a line-by-line indictment of Mr. Trump’s response to the coronavirus pandemic.

“He says we are learning to live with it — people are learning to die with it,” Mr. Biden said. “You folks home who have an empty chair at the kitchen table this morning, that man or wife going to bed tonight and reaching over to try to touch — out of habit — where their wife or husband was, is gone. Learning to live with it? Come on, we’re dying with it. Because he’s never said it’s dangerous. When is the last time — is it really dangerous, still? Are we dangerous? Will you tell the people it is dangerous now?”

Mr. Biden hit back after Mr. Trump claimed he had taken steps that saved millions of lives.

“The fact is that when we knew it was coming, when it hit, what happened? What did the president say?” the former vice president said. “He said, don’t worry, it’s going to go away, it will be gone by Easter. Don’t worry, the warm weather. Don’t worry, maybe inject bleach. He said he was kidding when he said that, but a lot of people thought it was serious. A whole range of things the president has said, even today. He thinks we are in control. We are about to lose 200,000 more people.”

Oct. 22, 2020, 9:26 p.m. ET

Asked about a pandemic plan, Trump goes on the attack.

Credit...Erin Schaff/The New York Times

President Trump accused Joseph R. Biden Jr. of “living in a basement,” lobbing a familiar insult against the former vice president as he departed from his initially more restrained tone at the final presidential debate on Thursday.

Asked by Kristen Welker, the debate moderator, to respond to Mr. Biden’s argument that the coronavirus pandemic was far from over, Mr. Trump said the country was “learning to live with it — we have no choice” before falsely suggesting that Mr. Biden was dealing with the virus by hiding in his house.

“We can’t lock ourselves up in a basement like Joe does,” Mr. Trump said. “He has the — he has the ability to lock himself up. I don’t know. He’s obviously made a lot of money someplace. But he has this thing about living in a basement. People can’t do that.”

In fact, though Mr. Biden took a cautious approach to campaigning for much of the summer, largely staying close to his home in Delaware, he has since ramped up his travel and is now holding socially distanced campaign events in battleground states across the country.

Oct. 22, 2020, 9:18 p.m. ET

Trump and Biden kick off the night by sparring over the coronavirus.

President Trump opened the debate with a series of false claims about the coronavirus: He claimed that a vaccine was “ready,” and that he was “immune” because he had recovered from his own illness. He also said that “2.2 million people modeled out were expected to die,” a claim he often repeats but for which there is no clear backing.

“It will be distributed very quickly,” Mr. Trump said, speaking calmly, of a vaccine, when pressed about the quick timeline he had laid out. (Regulators are likely still at least a month away from even considering an emergency authorization for a coronavirus vaccine.)

Former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. opened by saying the president’s handling of the coronavirus disqualified him from serving a second term. Mr. Trump did not interrupt him during his two-minute opening statement, as his microphone was muted.

“220,000 Americans dead,” Mr. Biden said. “Anybody who is responsible for that many deaths should not remain president of United States of America.”

“We are about to go through a dark winter,” Mr. Biden added, “and he has no clear plan and there’s no prospect that there’s going to be a vaccine available for the majority of the American people before the middle of next year.”

“I don’t think we’re going to have a dark winter at all,” Mr. Trump countered.

Later, when pressed on taking responsibility for the spread of the coronavirus in the country, Mr. Trump both accepted and hedged in the same breath. “I take full responsibility, but China brought it here,” he said. “It’s not my fault.”

Oct. 22, 2020, 9:04 p.m. ET

The final presidential debate has begun, without plexiglass barriers.

Credit...Amr Alfiky/The New York Times

President Trump and former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. have taken the debate stage in Nashville for their second and final debate.

Mr. Biden emerged wearing a mask, then took it off when he reached his lectern. Mr. Trump did not have a mask on. Kristen Welker, the NBC News correspondent moderating the debate, welcomed both men and posed the first question, about the coronavirus.

As expected, the two men did not shake hands because of virus precautions, but it is not certain they would have embraced anyway, given the nastiness that has escalated over the last few days of the campaign.

The debate will take place without plexiglass barriers between the two candidates. The Commission on Presidential Debates had arranged for them, but both campaigns agreed to take them down on Thursday after Mr. Biden and Mr. Trump each tested negative for the coronavirus.

Mr. Trump’s family members were shown on CNN wearing masks, unlike at the first debate last month in Cleveland.

Oct. 22, 2020, 8:57 p.m. ET

Kristen Welker, the debate moderator, has an unenviable task.

Credit...William B. Plowman/NBC, via NBC NewsWire, via Getty Images

The moderator of tonight’s debate will be Kristen Welker, an NBC News correspondent.

Ms. Welker — who will be only the second Black woman to moderate a presidential debate on her own, following Carole Simpson in 1992 — is a White House correspondent who co-anchors NBC’s “Weekend Today” show.

Tonight, she faces an unenviable task: running an orderly event after President Trump turned the first debate into an interruption-fest.

Mr. Trump has spent the week trying to portray Ms. Welker as “extraordinarily unfair,” part of his attempt to run a campaign not just against Joseph R. Biden Jr. but against the news media.

He has falsely accused Ms. Welker of deleting her Twitter feed, and conservative publications have resurfaced pictures of her posing at the White House Christmas party with President Barack Obama and Michelle Obama in an attempt to show that she is biased.

They failed to mention that she also attended a White House Christmas party hosted by Mr. Trump, who put an end to the tradition of White House correspondents posing for photos with the president and first lady.

In the past, however, Mr. Trump has praised Ms. Welker. At a news conference earlier this year in Davos, Switzerland, Mr. Trump singled her out to congratulate her on her promotion at NBC.

“They made a very wise decision,” he said, even appearing to consider her offer of sitting down with him for an interview.

Oct. 22, 2020, 8:13 p.m. ET

Trump’s attacks on Biden’s family are amplifying Russian misinformation, Biden campaign warns.

Credit...Anna Moneymaker for The New York Times

As President Trump previews attacks on Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s son Hunter, the Biden campaign warned Thursday that it would cast some of those potential attacks as reflecting a foreign misinformation campaign.

“If we see tonight from Donald Trump these attacks on Vice President Biden’s family, I think we need to be very, very clear that what he’s doing here is amplifying Russian misinformation,” Kate Bedingfield, a deputy campaign manager to Mr. Biden, said in a call with reporters.

Mr. Trump has been pushing an unverified New York Post report that suggests Mr. Biden met with an adviser to a Ukrainian energy company on whose board Hunter Biden served. The Biden campaign said official schedules showed no meeting between Mr. Biden and the adviser, and a Senate Republican inquiry found no evidence Mr. Biden had engaged in wrongdoing over his son’s business dealings.

The New York Post article was pushed by Rudolph W. Giuliani, Mr. Trump’s personal lawyer. Mr. Trump is said to have been warned that Russian intelligence officials were seeking to use Mr. Giuliani to spread disinformation to undermine Mr. Biden.

Oct. 22, 2020, 7:25 p.m. ET

From the annals of muted mic history: Ronald Reagan’s ‘I am paying for this microphone’ moment.

Credit...Sara Krulwich/The New York Times

This will not be the first time microphone muting has been an issue at a debate: One of the most famous moments of the 1980 presidential primary came when a moderator in New Hampshire tried to cut off the microphone of Ronald Reagan, whose retort, “I am paying for this microphone, Mr. Green,” quickly became the stuff of legend.

The circumstances were complicated, showing that, then as now, debates about debates were common.

Reagan was set to square off against George Bush in a two-person debate sponsored by The Nashua Telegraph, but after the Federal Election Commission raised objections to the plan, the Reagan campaign agreed to pay for it. As the event began, Reagan and the moderator got into an argument over how many candidates would be allowed to participate.

At one point the moderator asked the technicians to cut off Reagan’s mic. Reagan, with a flash of anger, stood up, picked up his mic, and asked, “Is this on?”

He then sat down again, and delivered his famous line.

“I am paying for this microphone, Mr. Green,” Reagan said, in fact mangling the name of the moderator, Jon Breen, the executive editor of The Nashua Telegraph.

Reagan, a former Hollywood actor, had adapted the line from a Spencer Tracy movie, “State of the Union,” in which the Tracy character says, “Don’t you shut me off. I’m paying for this broadcast.”

Tonight’s muting should be more orderly. During the first two minutes each candidate speaks in each of the six 15-minute segments, his opponent’s microphone will be muted. Kristen Welker, the NBC News correspondent moderating the event, won’t have access to a mute button herself, so her ability to keep the candidates in line may be limited.

Oct. 22, 2020, 6:57 p.m. ET

Climate change will be a topic tonight. Trump recently softened his climate denial while the cameras were off.

Credit...Doug Mills/The New York Times

The briefing in wildfire-ravaged California last month was a time-honored staple of White House agitprop, the president around a horseshoe-shaped table with local emergency responders and politicians discussing a natural disaster.

But President Trump made news on Sept. 14 at Sacramento’s McClellan Airport. State leaders were urging him to recognize the role of global warming in the record breaking wildfire season, when he smiled, shrugged, and said, “It will start getting cooler. You just watch.”

When a participant lamented that the science did not agree, the president quipped, “I don’t think science knows, actually.”

To Mr. Trump’s supporters, it was a signal that his denial of climate change had not shifted. To his detractors, it was still more proof that he will not accept established science. But according to three people who witnessed the event, it was all theater.

A few minutes later, out of the range of television cameras, Mr. Trump readily agreed with Gov. Gavin Newsom that climate change in fact did exacerbate the wildfire season.

He called its responsibility “probably like 50-50,” along with poor forest management, the people familiar with the discussion said.

Judd Deere, a White House spokesman, said in a statement the remarks were “not a correct reading of the conversation.”

But the president’s casual, semiprivate acknowledgment of climate change stunned several observers, some of whom likened it to the president’s admission to journalist Bob Woodward that he deliberately downplayed the coronavirus despite knowing it was “deadly stuff.”

At the California event, Governor Newsom approached Mr. Trump after the briefing had ended and the press pool had departed. He said he hoped the president understood that California leaders felt it was important to raise the issue of climate change despite their different views, according to the observers, who asked not to be named because they were not authorized to discuss the conversation.

“Gavin, I totally get it, and really it’s probably like 50-50,” President Trump replied, according to those who overheard.

Scientists said whether or not Mr. Trump was purposely provoking outrage on the left to delight his base, his equivocating on climate change was dangerous.

“Published science shows that pollution from human sources causes 98 percent of the heat of climate change and that human-caused climate change has doubled wildfire over natural levels in the western U.S. On both issues, Mr. Trump is wrong,” said Patrick Gonzalez, a forest ecologist and climate change scientist at the University of California, Berkeley.

“When Mr. Trump denies science and blocks action on climate change, he puts people’s lives and homes at risk,” Dr. Gonzalez said.

Oct. 22, 2020, 6:34 p.m. ET

A brief history of needing — or wanting — a mute button in politics.

Credit...Amr Alfiky/The New York Times

During live broadcasts, there’s always the potential for a hot mic horror story: someone’s microphone left on, unknown to them, exposing some of their less polished thoughts to the audience. In President Trump and Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s only debate so far, microphone volume wasn’t as much of an issue as interruptions, but those interruptions have illuminated the utility of a mute button all the same.

“I think they had expected that a moderator stepping in and announcing that time is up or asking someone not to interrupt would be effective — it was not,” Mark Lukasiewicz, who has produced debates for NBC and serves as dean of the communications school at Hofstra University, said of the Commission on Presidential Debates. “And so the commission has equipped itself with another tool to enforce that rule.”

That tool is the mute button: Mr. Trump and Mr. Biden will each have two minutes to respond to questions tonight without their opponent being able to speak, after the first debate devolved into practically incomprehensible cross talk spurred by frequent interjections from Mr. Trump.

Particularly in a year when live broadcasts have had to shift online in response to coronavirus concerns, the mute button has become even more important. When a Supreme Court oral argument in Barr v. American Association of Political Consultants was being live-streamed in May, a hilariously inopportune toilet flush (claimed by no one) would have been better left unheard.

And when Senator Tom Carper, Democrat of Delaware, shouted expletives into a mic he didn’t know was on during a virtual Senate hearing on the Postal Service in August, a hot-button issue became a laughing matter.

Politics is not the only arena that benefits from muted mics, as working from home has presented a range of new challenges, being interrupted by family members in the background not the least among them.

In one memorable instance this summer, Clare Wenham, an assistant professor at the London School of Economics, was being interviewed on BBC about the U.K. lockdown when her daughter interrupted with a question. “Mummy, what’s his name?” the girl asked her mother about the interviewer.

Oct. 22, 2020, 6:00 p.m. ET

What polling reveals about public opinion on Covid-19, race, national security and more.

Credit...Dan Koeck for The New York Times

Here is a look at where Americans stand on the issues that President Trump and Joseph R. Biden Jr. are set to debate tonight, according to public opinion data.

When the coronavirus shutdown had just begun, some voters expressed tentative support for Mr. Trump’s leadership on the pandemic. But as it became clear that he had no intention of mounting a national response to contain the virus, faith in his performance plummeted.

Mr. Biden has built a formidable polling advantage over Mr. Trump on the coronavirus crisis: By double-digit margins, voters say they trust him over the president to handle it.

It’s not quite clear what the debate’s moderator, Kristen Welker, has planned for the section titled “American families,” but a range of polling data shows that voters remain shaken by the pandemic’s effects and uncertain about what the future holds. The recent New York Times/Siena poll found that 50 percent of likely voters said they were actually better off than four years ago, while just a third said they were doing worse. But when asked about the country at large, 55 percent said things had grown worse.

Among Americans — including white voters not in the Republican Party — concern about anti-Black discrimination hit a record high this year. Partly as a result, voters overwhelmingly pick Mr. Biden as the better option to handle racial issues. In an ABC News/Ipsos poll last month, voters said Mr. Biden would do a better job handling issues of racial discrimination than Mr. Trump would by roughly two to one.

Republicans have grown more likely to say that it is white people who face bias, according to polling from the Public Religion Research Institute: 57 percent of Republicans said white people faced a lot of discrimination in the institute’s 2020 American Values Survey. Members of Mr. Trump’s party are now more likely to say that white people or Christians face a great deal of discrimination than they are to say that about Black people, the survey found.

Mr. Trump has consistently denied the science of climate change, leaving him out of step with most Americans — including, at this point, members of his own party. Nearly two-thirds of Americans said they thought the government was doing too little to confront climate change, according to a Pew Research Center poll this year. It found majorities of both Democrats and Republicans supporting a range of federal measures to confront global warming.

By a huge margin — 58 percent to 19 percent — registered voters said in an NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll that Mr. Biden would handle the response to climate change better than Mr. Trump.

Voters have been evenly split on whether Mr. Trump was being too hostile to America’s traditional allies (43 percent said yes) or handling those allegiances well (44 percent), according to a Quinnipiac University poll last year.

Americans broadly think Mr. Biden would do a better job of handling foreign policy. Fifty-nine percent chose him on the issue, according to a CNN poll last month, compared with just 39 percent who picked Mr. Trump.

In 2016, Mr. Trump consistently scored ahead of Hillary Clinton in polls measuring whom voters considered to be the “stronger leader.” But when asked in an ABC News/Washington Post poll last year whether they thought he had the right personality and temperament to do the job of president, 62 percent of Americans said no, while just 36 percent said yes.

Asked in a CNN poll this month whom they considered more honest and trustworthy, Americans chose Mr. Biden over Mr. Trump, 57 percent to 33 percent.

Oct. 22, 2020, 5:31 p.m. ET

The debate will begin at 9 p.m. Eastern. Here is how to watch, and what to watch for.

Barring some cataclysmic event in the next two weeks, tonight’s debate will be the last moment in the presidential race guaranteed to draw a huge viewership, and the final time President Trump and former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. will share a stage.

The stakes are particularly high for Mr. Trump, who is trailing in most national and battleground state polls and whose performance at the first debate appeared to hurt his standing. The president pulled out of what was supposed to be a second debate after the Commission on Presidential Debates decided that the forum should be held virtually in light of Mr. Trump’s coronavirus diagnosis.

Here is what you need to know about tonight’s debate, and how to watch.

  • Kristen Welker of NBC News will moderate the debate, which will take place in Nashville.

  • It will begin at 9 p.m. Eastern and run for 90 minutes. The announced topics include fighting the coronavirus, American families, race in the United States, climate change, national security and leadership.

  • The New York Times will cover the event live, with real-time analysis from teams of reporters, on nytimes.com.

  • The debate will be televised on channels including ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN, C-SPAN, PBS, Fox News and MSNBC. Many news outlets, including ABCCBSNBCPBSFox News and C-SPAN, will stream the debate on YouTube.

Oct. 22, 2020, 5:13 p.m. ET

How the muted-mic rule is supposed to work at the debate.

Credit...Erin Schaff/The New York Times

After the first presidential debate devolved into a chaotic spectacle marked by President Trump’s frequent interruptions, the Commission on Presidential Debates took the extraordinary step of deciding to mute the microphones of the candidates during portions of tonight’s debate, the second and final one before Election Day.

During the first two minutes each candidate speaks in each of the six 15-minute segments, his opponent’s microphone will be muted. After those initial statements in each segment, both mics will be turned on and are not expected to be cut off during the rest of the segment, even if one candidate keeps interrupting the other or eats up time talking.

Kristen Welker, the NBC News correspondent moderating the event, faces the daunting task of trying to make both candidates adhere to the rules to which their campaigns agreed. She won’t have access to a mute button herself, so her ability to keep them in line may be limited.

Over the 90-minute debate, Mr. Trump and Mr. Biden will be asked questions in six different categories selected by Ms. Welker: fighting the coronavirus, race in America, climate change, national security, leadership and American families.

Mr. Biden is expected to redirect his answers back to Mr. Trump’s handling of the coronavirus, which has killed more than 222,000 people in the United States so far, whereas Mr. Trump has signaled he hopes to attack Mr. Biden’s son Hunter.

Oct. 22, 2020, 5:03 p.m. ET

Tonight’s debate will focus on six topics. Trump and Biden differ sharply on all of them.

Credit...Mark Makela for The New York Times

When President Trump and Joseph R. Biden Jr. face off in Nashville tonight at their final debate, they will be grilled on six issues, organizers said: the coronavirus, race relations, climate change, national security, American families and leadership.

The topics were selected by the debate’s moderator, Kristen Welker of NBC News, and while it is unclear just what she will ask, they are all subjects that have divided the candidates. Here is where the candidates stand on some of those issues.

Since the beginning of the pandemic, Mr. Trump has downplayed the threat from the virus and has ignored advice from health officials, refusing to wear a mask and holding gatherings with large crowds. His administration’s failures to rapidly expand testing are also well documented.

Mr. Biden’s plans call for improved testing, expanded production of personal protective equipment, safe vaccine development and the safe reopening of schools. He has emphasized the importance of following science, and he has modeled responsible behavior on the campaign trail, wearing a mask and refraining from holding crowded rallies.

Mr. Trump repeatedly claims to have done more for Black Americans than any president other than Abraham Lincoln, an assertion that most experts say is absurd on its face. The president points to his support for long-term funding for historically Black colleges and universities, and to his signing of the bipartisan First Step Act, which made modest reforms in federal sentencing laws.

But from the earliest days of his presidency, Mr. Trump has stoked racial divisions. After clashes between white supremacists and counterprotesters at a rally in Charlottesville, Va., in 2017, he said that there were “very fine people on both sides.” He used vulgar language to deride African nations and said that Haitian immigrants “all have AIDS.” And in the first debate, he refused to denounce the Proud Boys, a far-right extremist group, telling them to “stand back and stand by.”

Since the death of George Floyd in police custody in May, Mr. Biden has emphasized the need to fight racial injustice, speaking about the issue in a strikingly different way than Mr. Trump does. This summer, Mr. Biden rolled out a plan to address economic racial disparities, such as by increasing access to capital for minority-owned businesses. He has also called for changes in policing, including a ban on chokeholds.

Mr. Trump has called climate change a hoax and called those who care about the issue “prophets of doom.” Mr. Trump has moved to withdraw from the Paris agreement on climate change and has rolled back virtually every regulation aimed at reducing emissions from vehicles, power plants and other sources. He has promoted the development of fossil fuel energy, and made it easier for aging coal plants to stay online.

Mr. Biden has attacked Mr. Trump as a “climate arsonist,” criticized the president’s dismissiveness of science and championed a $2 trillion plan to develop clean energy while driving down emissions. But he also has been on the defensive about the Green New Deal, a climate plan embraced by progressive groups and criticized by Republicans. In his first debate with Mr. Trump, Mr. Biden said he did not support the Green New Deal, but his website calls it a “crucial framework” for action.

Another area where Mr. Biden is likely to come under attack from Mr. Trump is fracking, the process of extracting oil and gas from shale rock. Mr. Biden has pledged a ban on new oil and gas permitting on public lands and waters, but he has assured union leaders that he will protect existing fracking jobs while pursuing a clean energy transition. Mr. Trump has accused him, falsely, of wanting to ban fracking altogether.

Guide to the 2020 Election

No comments: