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Forbes
Forbes
5 Sep 2024


Former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris are set to debate Tuesday, after ABC News finalized the rules for the faceoff on Wednesday, including muted microphones when the candidates aren’t speaking—a policy Trump’s campaign had proposed.

Republican Presidential Nominee Donald Trump Speaks To The Press In Palm Beach, Florida

Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump speaks during a press conference at ... [+] Mr. Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate on August 08, 2024, in Palm Beach, Florida. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

Getty Images

ABC News anchor and managing editor David Muir and ABC News Live “Prime” anchor Linsey Davis will host the 90-minute debate on Tuesday, Sept. 10, 9 p.m. EDT, at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia, with no live audience.

As with the prior debate between Trump and President Joe Biden before Harris became the nominee, each candidate's microphone will be muted when it isn’t their turn to speak, according to a list of rules ABC News says both Trump and Harris' campaigns have agreed to follow.

The microphones were a point of disagreement between the Harris campaign, which wanted unmuted microphones—suggesting it could expose Trump’s penchant for interrupting his opponents—and the Trump campaign, which wanted muted mics, despite Trump saying he preferred for them to be unmuted.

There will be no opening statements, Trump and Harris can’t ask each other questions, and each candidate will be given two minutes to answer each question with a two-minute rebuttal plus an additional minute for a follow-up, clarification or response, ABC says.

Trump won a coin flip to deliver the final closing statement, while Harris chose to stand at the podium to the right of users’ screens.

Candidates will stand behind podiums and are prohibited from interacting with staff or using pre-written notes during the debate, which will feature two commercial breaks.

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Both campaigns on Wednesday announced they had agreed to the debate rules set by ABC News, ending the back-and-forth over the microphone rule.

The debate will run live on ABC and most other major networks at 9 p.m. on Tuesday, and on the ABC News Live streaming network, Disney+ and Hulu.

Trump said earlier this month he also agreed to a Sept. 4 debate on Fox News and that the ABC debate would be Sept. 25. His campaign quickly clarified the ABC debate would be Sept.10 and NBC News would host the Sept. 25 debate, though Harris has only agreed to the Sept. 10 debate so far. An NBC spokesperson also indicated the date Trump floated was not official, according to CBS News, which reported the spokesperson said the network has had conversations with both campaigns about a range of dates.

Yes—Oct. 1 on CBS.

Trump agreed last month to debate Harris after suggesting he might back out amid a feud over the rules. The rules for the ABC News debate mirror the ones Trump and Biden followed during the June 27 debate on CNN, including no live audience and muted microphones. Biden’s rocky performance during that debate led him to drop out of the race and endorse Harris, following a weeks-long revolt by many top Democrats. Trump repeatedly waffled over whether he would debate Harris, bashing the network as biased.

Trump’s campaign in 2020 argued against then-host Commission on Presidential Debates’ decision to turn off mics during the second debate following repeated interruptions from Trump during the first debate.

Trump Reverses Course: Offers 3 Debates With Harris—Including ABC Debate He Called Off (Forbes)

Trump Pledges He’ll Debate Harris In ‘Pretty Near Future’—After Backing Out Of ABC Debate (Forbes)

Trump Backs Out Of Debate And Proposes Another On Fox News—Harris Claims He's 'Running Scared' (Forbes)