US Election 2024: Kamala Harris and Donald Trump prep for debate that could define rest of the campaign

Tyler Pager, Josh Dawsey
The Washington Post
ATLANTA, GEORGIA - JUNE 27: Republican presidential candidate, former U.S. President Donald Trump delivers remarks during the CNN Presidential Debate at the CNN Studios on June 27, 2024 in Atlanta, Georgia. Former President Trump and U.S. President Joe Biden are facing off in the first presidential debate of the 2024 campaign. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images) Justin Sullivan
ATLANTA, GEORGIA - JUNE 27: Republican presidential candidate, former U.S. President Donald Trump delivers remarks during the CNN Presidential Debate at the CNN Studios on June 27, 2024 in Atlanta, Georgia. Former President Trump and U.S. President Joe Biden are facing off in the first presidential debate of the 2024 campaign. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images) Justin Sullivan Credit: AAP

When Vice President Kamala Harris and former president Donald Trump meet on Tuesday night in Philadelphia, local time, they will have taken dramatically different approaches to preparing for the first — and probably only — presidential debate between the two candidates.

Harris spent most of the past four days ensconced in Pittsburgh’s Omni William Penn Hotel for an intensive “debate camp.”

Her aides created a mock setup to mimic the layout of the debate studio; cast a veteran Donald Trump stand-in to unleash harsh attacks and offensive comments; and put the vice president through hours of rehearsed questions.

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About 530km to the east, Trump spent much of the weekend at his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey, opting for “policy sessions” with aides and allies instead of traditional practice runs.

The former president has participated in about a half-dozen of the sessions in recent weeks, reviewing Harris’s policy record from her 2020 presidential campaign and practising how to respond to an expected barrage of attacks on his character.

And yet for all the broadsides they have exchanged, Harris and Trump have never met.

The event is likely to draw the largest audience for either candidate before November, and both sides agree that the face-off, hosted by ABC News, carries unusually high stakes, given the campaign’s compressed timetable and the fact that polls show it is essentially tied.

The previous presidential debate, in June, dramatically reshaped the campaign as President Joe Biden stumbled over his words, struggling at times to complete sentences and landing few criticisms of Trump.

The performance exacerbated long-standing concerns about Biden’s age, eventually leading him to abandon his reelection campaign and endorse Harris.

This time, Trump will face an opponent who is expected to be far more formidable on the debate stage and is intent on creating a contrast not only with Biden but with Trump’s often-rambling appearances.

A former prosecutor and senator who burnished her national profile in Senate hearings by aggressively questioning Trump appointees, Harris planned to deploy the same tactics Tuesday, firing back at any questionable remarks by Trump and trying to fact-check him in real time.

Those plans have hit a snag of sorts.

Harris’s aides wanted ABC to change the rules so both microphones would remain unmuted throughout the debate, hoping that would encourage Trump to go off-script and let Harris issue sharp retorts.

Trump signalled a willingness to unmute the mics, but his aides were determined to keep the rules in place, telling the former president that Harris’s team was trying to set him up.

Harris’s aides fear that Trump will unleash so many dubious statements or attacks during his uninterrupted speaking time that she will be unable to challenge them all, according to people familiar with her planning, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal strategy.

After losing the fight on the microphones, Harris aides spent the weekend revising their strategy, hoping she will find other ways to parry Trump’s attacks, the people said.

Harris’s aides say she is prepared for whatever version of Trump shows up Tuesday, although given the rules, they expect the former president to be relatively disciplined and perform much as he did against Biden in June.

Some Harris allies privately concede that the fracas over the microphones was part of an effort to lower expectations for the vice president’s performance, fearing that too many Democrats and swing voters expect her to obliterate Trump onstage.

Harris’s campaign has repeatedly noted that Tuesday will be Trump’s seventh presidential debate.

“We expect Donald Trump will be ready for the debate,” Kevin Munoz, a spokesman for the Harris campaign, said in a statement.

“He is a showman who won his most recent debate back in June, and we know he has been practising even more and preparing harder than ever before.”

He added, “The Vice President will come to the debate prepared to share her vision for a new way forward for our country that turns the page on the past, and we believe it will crystallise for the American people what is at stake in this election.”

One concession that Harris’s campaign won: ABC News has assigned a producer to monitor each candidate during commercial breaks, especially if they leave the stage, to ensure that no aides pass them notes or try to communicate with them, according to a person familiar with the arrangement.

Trump’s camp, for its part, has tried to raise expectations for his rival.

“The high-bar expectation facing Kamala Harris is that for every new idea put forward, Harris has to explain both the damage she’s done to our economy as the sitting Vice President, as well as answer why she hasn’t implemented any of these new plans during the last 3½ years,” Jason Miller, a senior adviser to Trump, said in a statement.

“Further complicating matters is that Harris’ new Obama campaign advisers have told her to hide from the press for two months, further raising expectations for the voters,” Miller added.

“The one thing we do know, however, is that Kamala Harris’ values have not changed, and we will be educating the American public as to what that means policy-wise, in great detail.”

Politicians who have debated Trump in the past say a key to success for Harris will be her ability to avoid taking the former president’s bait on personal attacks, a mistake Biden made in the June 27 debate when he sparred with Trump over their respective golf games.

US President Joe Biden and former US President and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump participate in the first presidential debate of the 2024 elections at CNN's studios in Atlanta, Georgia, on June 27, 2024. (Photo by ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS / AFP)
Donald Trump shrugs off an attack from US President Joe Biden in the June 27 debate in the CNN studios. Credit: ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP

“Be who you are,” said former Ohio governor John Kasich, who ran against Trump in the 2016 Republican primaries.

“Figure out what you want to communicate and communicate it. Don’t get sidetracked. If somebody’s going to be really rude to you, you can point that out, but my sense is getting into a name-calling situation doesn’t benefit anybody.”

Trump has largely leaned on the same small group of aides to help prepare for this debate as he did for the last one: Miller, the senior adviser; Florida Representative Matt Gaetz; Stephen Miller, a top policy adviser; and Vince Haley and Ross Worthington, two of his speechwriters.

The Trump team also brought in former congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii, who sought the Democratic nomination in 2020 but is now backing Trump.

Gabbard debated Harris during the 2020 primary race and has helped Trump think through how the vice president might answer questions and how she might use gender against him, Trump advisers said.

Gabbard has not played Harris in a mock debate setting, but one Trump adviser said she has helped Trump “tremendously”.

Trump’s aides expect that Harris will unleash a litany of personal attacks about his legal cases, contrasting her record as a former prosecutor with his status as a felon.

They are also planning for criticisms of his record on the COVID-19 pandemic and his lack of progress on passing infrastructure legislation when he was president, despite years of promises to do so.

“One of the goals is to condition him to those attacks so he doesn’t overreact,” a Trump adviser said, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss confidential preparations.

Trump’s aides have given him reams of material as fodder for attacks on Harris’s previous liberal policy positions, including her proposal to ban fracking and her support for Medicare-for-all, neither of which Harris still embraces.

They have also compiled information on her record as a prosecutor in San Francisco, bringing up individual cases they think will embarrass her.

“We are trying to get her off-script so she will make a mistake,” said the Trump adviser with knowledge of the preparations.

Trump has eschewed practising with lecterns, and he does not like the public perception that he is practising at all, advisers say.

Instead, he has often used conference tables at his clubs or taken time during airplane flights. Aides say the former president views rallies — he held one in Wisconsin on Saturday — and interviews as the best preparation for the debate.

He has promised his advisers he will not be as aggressive as he was during the first 2020 debate with Biden, when he repeatedly interrupted Biden and talked over him in a widely mocked performance.

Trump now privately blames a coronavirus diagnosis, which he denied at the time, as the reason he did so poorly, people who have spoken to him say.

In preparing for Tuesday’s debate, Harris aides say the vice president still faces the challenge of introducing herself to large swaths of voters, and they expect the viewing audience Tuesday night to include many voters who have not yet made up their minds — and who might ultimately decide the election.

There will not be a live audience in the studio.

Workers raise a billboard advertising the upcoming presidential debate.
Workers raise a billboard advertising the upcoming presidential debate. Credit: JIM LO SCALZO/EPA

Harris’s campaign appearances so far, including her speech at the Democratic National Convention, were widely seen as successes by her advisers, but they said they recognise that an unscripted debate will have a different, potentially more sceptical audience.

“We feel good about how the convention introduced her to the country,” a Harris ally said, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss the preparations.

“We understand more target voters — whether swing voters or soft potential nonvoters — are going to be watching the debate more intensely than they did the convention.”

For that reason, Harris spent the weekend focused on answers that incorporate both her agenda and her biography, especially aspects of her life before the vice presidency. Aides hope she will create a sharp contrast with Trump on abortion rights and the economy.

Harris aides are also planning for Trump attacks on the liberal positions she endorsed in the 2020 Democratic primary contest.

While her campaign has signalled that she has abandoned many of those policy preferences, Harris herself has not always publicly stated as much, instead putting out statements through anonymous aides.

Harris’s debate prep has been led by Karen Dunn, a veteran Washington lawyer who coached her for her 2020 vice-presidential debate, and Rohini Kosoglu, a longtime policy adviser.

In addition, the sessions have featured Harris’s White House chief of staff, Lorraine Voles, and her campaign chief of staff, Sheila Nix.

Also on hand have been Tony West, Harris’s brother-in-law; Jen O’Malley Dillon, the campaign chair; David Plouffe, a senior adviser on the campaign; Brian Fallon and Kirsten Allen, her two top communications aides; Sean Clegg, a longtime political adviser dating to her California days; Minyon Moore, a longtime Harris ally who chaired the Democratic convention in Chicago; and Cedric L. Richmond, a former congressman and top White House staffer.

Philippe Reines, a longtime Hillary Clinton aide, was initially enlisted to play Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio) when Harris was preparing to face him in the vice-presidential debate.

Now that Harris has ascended to the top of the ticket and will face Trump, Reines has stayed on to play the former president, reprising the role he played for Clinton during her 2016 debate preparations.

After the debate, the Trump campaign is planning to bring more than two dozen allies to the spin room, including Gabbard and Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who ended his independent bid for president and endorsed Trump, people familiar with the plans said.

There are also discussions about bringing Vance to the spin room.

Harris’s campaign is planning to have California Governor Gavin Newsom appear in the spin room, the same role he played for Biden after the June debate.

© 2024 , The Washington Post

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Politics is polarised. The PM and his supporters believe this is a good government. Maybe he’s right.