-
October 2023
-
Issues of Today
- Free Speech Has Always Been a Game of Life or Death – Lesson
- Immigration Reform and DACA – Lesson
- Today’s Protesters Should Learn From MLK – Lesson
- Has the Media Made America More Divided? – Lesson
- Evil and The Political Divide – Lesson
- A Matter of Perspectives on the McCarthy Ouster – Lesson
- A Matter of Perspectives on the McCarthy Ouster – Quiz
- Biological Women Defend Female Athletes at Congress – Lesson
- Biological Women Defend Female Athletes at Congress – Quiz
- The Energy Behind the White House’s Hatred of Coal – Lesson
- The Energy Behind the White House’s Hatred of Coal – Quiz
- Democracy and the Changing Tides of Popular Opinion – Lesson
- Democracy and the Changing Tides of Popular Opinion – Quiz
- Election 2024: AI, Deepfakes, and Scams – Lesson
- Election 2024: AI, Deepfakes, and Scams – Quiz
- Survey Says: It’s Time to Leave New York – Lesson
- Survey Says: It’s Time to Leave New York – Quiz
- In the Aftermath of COVID, Were School Closures Worth It? – Lesson
- In the Aftermath of COVID, Were School Closures Worth It? – Quiz
- A Visit From the FBI Over Your Social Media Post? It Could Happen – Lesson
- A Visit From the FBI Over Your Social Media Post? It Could Happen – Quiz
- More Americans Want to Leave the Country – Lesson
- More Americans Want to Leave the Country – Quiz
- Will Celebrity Endorsements Impact the 2024 Election? – Lesson
- Will Celebrity Endorsements Impact the 2024 Election? – Quiz
- The Census – Where Citizens and Illegal Aliens Collide – Lesson
- The Census – Where Citizens and Illegal Aliens Collide – Quiz
- The Risks and Rewards of the Presidential Debate – Lesson
- The Risks and Rewards of the Presidential Debate – Quiz
- Trump and Biden Supporters Disagree Strongly on Family Values – Lesson
- Trump and Biden Supporters Disagree Strongly on Family Values – Quiz
-
Politics - How it Works
-
Political Parties
- Political Parties: Do We Really Need Them? – Lesson
- The Federalists: America’s First Political Party – Lesson
- The Federalists: America’s First Political Party – Quiz
- Democratic-Republican Party: Champions of Republicanism – Lesson
- The Democratic Party: Origins, Policies, and People – Lesson
- The Republican Party: The Grand Old Party – Lesson
- Independent Voters and the 2024 Election – Lesson
- Independent Voters and the 2024 Election – Quiz
-
Political Ideas and Ideologies
The Risks and Rewards of the Presidential Debate – Lesson
One way to win, a million ways to lose.
On June 27, two presidents – one former and one current – will be stage-managed by CNN producers to create what the network hopes will be a spectacle to revive its flagging ratings. Donald Trump and Joe Biden will take part in a debate that involves no studio audience. Candidates’ microphones will be muted when it isn’t their “turn” to speak, and the entire event will be completely controlled by a network that has been avowedly anti-Trump since November 2016.
The Debate Scorecard
For the president, all the planets have aligned. The network, the moderators – Jake Tapper and Dana Bash – and the format are all pro-Biden. Indeed, just last month, Bash described Trump’s campaign rhetoric as “antisemitic and incredibly dangerous” and claimed that it “was used in Nazi Germany.” Noting that moderators “will use all tools at their disposal to enforce timing and ensure a civilized discussion,” CNN will, at its discretion, turn off candidates’ microphones – thereby protecting Biden from Trump’s barbs. In fact, all the incumbent needs to do is spout well-rehearsed talking points to claim a victory.
Reuters reported that each campaign has specified the topics it favors. For Team Biden, those will be “abortion rights, the state of democracy and the economy.” For Trump, his outreach team apparently opted for “immigration, public safety and inflation as key issues ahead of the debate.”
After dismantling many of Trump’s immigration initiatives within his first week in office, Biden’s attempt to stem the flow of illegal immigrants right before the election is a weak spot for him. The record numbers speak for themselves. Much the same is true with inflation. Although the monthly figure is dropping, the cost of living crisis has seen wealth for middle- and low-income families crater. The chances of Biden winning the economy round are slim.
When it comes to issues of “democracy,” this will be a battle of rhetoric. Biden will try to paint Trump as the greatest threat the nation has known, no doubt referencing Jan. 6 and Trump’s comedic aside about being a “dictator” for “one day.”
Yet the debate may not be measured in balls and strikes but rather in tone and temperament.
A Knockout Blow?
Trump is well-known for his flippant mockery and on-the-spot quips. If he can strategically push his opponent – whether by referencing Biden’s false statements about Hunter Biden’s laptop when they debated in 2020, or, well, any number of questionable comments – the famously thin-skinned Biden may take the bait.
With the odds stacked against Trump in the Fourth Estate in general – and a decidedly anti-Trump bent specifically in the stables of CNN – the 45th president has to tip the scales in his direction. But he really needs only one sharp attack to penetrate the Biden defense. If he can deliver that, Trump might walk away victorious.