Trump ‘fine-tuning theatrics’ before Harris debate

Trump ‘fine-tuning theatrics’ before Harris debate

American presidential debates aren’t won on policy.

I’ve covered six presidential elections and have never seen a debate where one candidate emerged as the winner because they made an outstanding policy proposal.

Sure, the ABC News moderators at Tuesday’s debate will ask Donald Trump and Kamala Harris earnest questions about tax cuts and foreign affairs.

But what viewers always focus on are the moments where one candidate has a zinger of a line, or somehow unnerves their opponent, or simply seems more in control.

This is perhaps why an adviser to Trump tells me the former president hasn’t spent his prep time brushing up on policy.

Instead, he’s been “fine-tuning the theatrics of his performance”. If there’s one thing that Trump understands well, it’s television audiences.

He has also been on a presidential debate stage six times already.

For Kamala Harris, this poses a problem. This is her debut. She has not had much rehearsal time and it’s hard to become a world class performer in a couple of weeks.

Unlike her opponent, Ms Harris has spent the past week holed up in a Pennsylvania hotel deep in policy books – but her team has also tried to prepare her to win the optics battle too.

The Harris team has reportedly built a mock television stage – fully fitted with a debate podium and proper lighting.

Top advisers are standing-in and playing the role of Trump (with one of them reportedly even dressing in his signature boxy suits and red ties).

All of this is in a bid to get Ms Harris comfortable with the theatre of it all. They’ve also been reviewing hours of video of all those Trump debates, seeing which plays work well against him and which fall flat.

If the vice-president was hoping for a burst of last minute good news to quell any stage fright, she didn’t get it. A New York Times poll this week has rattled Democrats.

The poll showed a neck-and-neck race between the two candidates, but a sizeable share of voters said they didn’t feel they knew enough about Ms Harris.

One Democratic strategist texted to say they are nervous about the debate because they felt Ms Harris was tentative in a recent CNN interview.

Ask any of the Republicans who Trump demolished in the 2016 primary debates and they will surely tell you that “tentative” is not a winning strategy against him.

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