Posted on 09/25/2016 2:52:38 PM PDT by TaxPayer2000
Blame tradition and Abraham Lincoln.
If you dont want Donald Trump to become president, youve probably fantasized about a debate moderator interrupting him and calling him out: "Here are the things youve said so far that arent true..."
But on the eve of the first debate, the head of the Commission on Presidential Debates, Janet Brown, crushed those daydreams into finely ground dust.
"I don't think it's a good idea to get the moderator into essentially serving as the Encyclopedia Britannica," she told CNN. In her view, its the candidates job to fact-check each other not the moderators job to fact check them.
To Hillary Clinton and her supporters, this might seem like a betrayal. What it really is, though, is tradition.
The norm against fact-checking was famously broken in 2012, when Candy Crowley fact-checked a statement live during a Romney-Obama town hall debate. But as a general rule, presidential debate moderators dont think fact-checking candidates is their job.
Just look to Fox Newss Chris Wallace, whos moderating the third and last debate and has already said as much: "I do not believe it is my job to be a truth squad," he told Howard Kurtz in an interview earlier this month.
This isnt a matter of a Fox News host giving favorable treatment to a Republican candidate; its a matter of a Commission-selected moderator giving the Commissions line. Longtime debate moderators, including PBSs Jim Lehrer (whos moderated more debates than any other journalist), dont feel moderator fact-checks are appropriate either.
At a glance, this probably seems naive at best and bonkers at worst. If the moderators arent supposed to call out candidates when they lie, whats the point of having them there at all? The answer, though, is that the moderators really dont think they ought to be there at all.
Since the very first televised presidential debate of 1960, moderators have been trying and failing to recreate the Lincoln/Douglas debates of 1858: two candidates on a stage, talking about their competing visions of America to the voters, may the best orator win.
Its always been a romantic ideal. But its been a tradition for decades of debating. And when it comes to the hidebound world of presidential debates, the combination of "idealized discourse" and "revered tradition" is basically enough to guarantee that moderators will treat this election and these candidates just like any other.
A very brief history of debate moderators trying to make themselves disappear
If the media had had its way, the very first (and most famous) televised presidential debate wouldnt have had moderators at all.
In 1960, the campaigns of Richard Nixon and John Kennedy came to an agreement with the major TV networks (at the time, CBS, NBC, and ABC) to debate each other on live TV. As Jill Lepore writes in a recent New Yorker feature, the biggest sticking point in negotiations wasnt between Nixon and Kennedy but between the campaigns and the networks: "The networks wanted Nixon and Kennedy to question each other; both men insisted on taking questions from a panel of reporters."
As Lepore writes, CBS wasnt even willing to call it a "debate," reserving the word for times when opponents actually directly debated each other. (Instead, they called it a "joint appearance.") But CBS lost both the battle and the war.
Televised presidential debates didnt happen again until 1976. Every four years since then, what happens in fall is called a "debate." Every four years since then, it involves moderators. And every four years since then or so it seems the moderators try, and fail, to make themselves invisible and facilitate a conversation between the candidates.
Its important to remember, particularly if youre a politics superfan, that what youre going to see during the general elections is very different from what weve seen so far this year. During the primaries in particular the Republican primary moderators had to assert their presence, as often as not, as traffic cops. They often had to negotiate among seven or eight (or, in the first debate, 16) different candidates so that everyone could get a word in edgewise and respond to direct attacks.
General election presidential debates are a dramatically different scene. With only a couple of exceptions, over the 40-year history of annual televised debates theyve been one-on-one affairs. The moderators dont have to do anything to ensure that each candidate gets ample time. As a matter of fact, the more the moderator steps in, the less time the candidates get.
As far as the moderators are concerned, fact-checking should absolutely happen but it should be the candidates job to fact-check each other. During a discussion at the University of Notre Dame in September, Lehrer of PBS explained that if Trump lied about his opposition to the Iraq War during a debate, "all any moderator would have done is said, 'Senator Clinton?' And then she would have called him a liar. The moderator would never have to intrude."
Lehrer has long been a proponent of these exchanges, which in the past (back when major party nominees were all one gender) he called "man to man." But usually the candidates just dont bite.
In 2008, when Barack Obama made a reference to John McCain, Lehrer interrupted: "Say it directly to him." Both candidates balked: "Are you afraid I couldnt hear him?" McCain joked, and Obama simply skipped to the next phrase of his answer to avoid the situation entirely.
"I'm just determined to get you all to talk to each other," Lehrer said, exasperated. Its been the motto of campaign moderators for the past 40 years.
The debates are supposed to be the discourse of a more genteel and rational America
According to the president of the Commission on Presidential Debates, which sets the rules for who qualifies for debates and how debates are formatted, often long before the candidates are even chosen, one of the criteria for selecting journalists to moderate the debates is this: "They need to understand for better or worse that their names are not on the ballot."
Its a strong warning against moderators "intruding" (as experienced debate moderator Bob Schieffer of CBS put it at the Notre Dame event). But its also an illustration of how the commission sees itself and the debates: a unique opportunity to shut out the noise of the outside world and let the people whose names are on the ballot present their visions to America.
The ideal of debate that always gets brought up in these contexts is the Lincoln/Douglas debates, which werent presidential debates at all, since the candidates were running against each other for Senate at the time. (This meant they were campaigning on behalf of the state legislature candidates whod elect a senator.)
Those debates were barely debates: One candidate would give a speech, then the other, then the first would give another speech. And they might have been forgotten to history entirely if Lincoln hadnt then collected the texts into a book, bringing national attention to his oratory and helping him win the Republican nomination for president in 1860.
But its an attractive ideal, isnt it? Two candidates, arguing their visions for America before a crowd, with no need for an external authority to keep them on message and civil. Its nice to believe thats the way democracy works.
In fact, it might even be particularly appealing during this cycle. The public complains that they dont hear enough about the candidates policy proposals; what better way to fix that than to have the candidates discuss those plans with America themselves, rather than forcing them to talk about stupid horse race controversies? Matt Lauer got attacked for asking Hillary Clinton tough questions and Donald Trump softballs. If Clinton herself were responsible for pressuring Trump, wouldnt that problem solve itself?
To see the problem with this logic, you have to see the difference between Clinton and Trump not just as a difference of shared values but as an absence of shared facts.
If the point of a presidential debate is to move the discussion between candidates beyond "he said/she said," thats kind of the opposite of forcing the candidates to be responsible for correcting each others falsehoods. But as long as the presidential debates are ruled by the traditionalists, candidates will be expected to do both.
They remember what happened to Candy Crowley.
“Candy Crowley fact-checked a statement live during a Romney-Obama town hall debate.”
Yea, and wasn’t she wrong???
The “moderator’s” job is to ask the question and monitor time...That’s it...PERIOD...
That, and in order not lose the rest of their not demented viewership, they'd have to fact check HRC, of whom it has been said that "she'd rather climb a tree to tell a lie than to stand where she is and tell the truth."
I'm sorry I missed that Forum. I guess I saw the other one.
Crowley didn’t “fact check” anything. She coordinated with Obama in presenting a plausible excuse for his ineptitude.
Trump is the Truth.
The only REAL fact checkers that matter are those of us who will be watching. Just about every statement by Shrillary will be a potential and even a probable lie.
Crowley didn’t fact check, she took sides.
Everyone knows there will be a debate transcript. Anyone with internet access can do all the fact-checking they want.
It is disingenuous of Clinton’s minions to demand a moderator/Inquisitor, but that’s how she rolls.
All we want for Donald Trump is a level playing field.
I think NBC will structure the questions given to Hillary to let her attack Trump and questions given to Trump will be structured to make him defend himself...
The LSM wouln’t recognize a fact if it came out of the toilet while they were peeing sitting down and bit them on the butt.
“Fact” has lost meaning. Leftists and “fact checkers” have made it mean “what I want to believe” rather than “what’s true”.
Fact checking sites are also liberally biased and Trump will call them out on that.
I think this is a pre-debate spin by Clinton. She will do the fact checking at the debate and doesn’t want to come across as the scolding hag that she is. She’s trying to soften the battlefield, but it won’t work. Her speaking voice and manner are too annoying.
We need less Holt.
I guess I’m old fashioned but I always thought a
debate argued a specific question.
Should England ensure Belgium’s neutrality?
What we have now is confrontational electioneering.
How on earth could we the People ever have permitted the existence of such a thing as a non-representative body of interested parties to control Presidential candidates in this way?
And the article failed to point out: Crowley got it wrong. It was a complete setup, and she fell for it.
Sharyl Atkinson published an article in the past week or so, where she detailed the Obama's administration to set up that strawman and press the media to knock it down.
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