Washington: President Donald Trump needed to make the first general election debate about his rival, Democrat Joe Biden. Instead, as he so often does, Trump made it about himself.
Trump's aggressive posture may have appealed to his most passionate supporters — a primetime display of the brashness he has brought to the Oval Office. But by the end of the 90-minute contest, it was unclear whether Trump succeeded in making up any ground in trying to expand his coalition or win over persuadable voters, particularly white, educated women and independents who have been turned off in part by the same tone and tenor the president displayed on the debate stage.
"Trump brought the chaotic nature of his presidency to the debate stage," said Alex Conant, a Republican strategist. "He needed to knock Biden off his game, but he may have just reminded independent voters why they've turned against him."
Indeed, if there were ever a debate that turned voters away from politics altogether, this was it. Despite an array of complex and substantive issues on the debate agenda — a Supreme Court vacancy, the government's response to the coronavirus pandemic, the nation's reckoning over race and police brutality — the candidates' dramatically different visions for the country were frequently overshadowed by their obvious disdain for each other.
What did breakthrough likely were not the moments Trump was seeking. The most striking exchange of the night came when he failed to condemn white supremacist groups. And when prodded by Biden to address the Proud Boys, a male-only group of neo-fascists who describe themselves as "western chauvinists" and have been known to incite street violence, the president offered a puzzling response.
"Proud Boys, stand back and stand by," Trump said.
There were also glaring gaps in Trump's outlines for addressing the future of health care coverage in America and controlling the pandemic, which has killed more than 2,00,000 people in the U.S. this year. He also refused to embrace the science of climate change, even as record wildfires rage in the West.
Among Trump's political challenges throughout this tumultuous year has been leveling a sustained and consistent attack against Biden. Some Republicans believe he has squandered many of the advantages of incumbency: the money and the months a sitting president can spend defining an eventual rival in the eyes of voters.
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The result: With five weeks until Election Day and voting already underway in some key states, Trump has consistently trailed Biden in national polls. Biden also holds a lead in some of the battleground states, although others appear to be significantly closer.
With time running out to change the trajectory of the race, Trump did arrive at the debate armed with an array of attacks on his opponent. He challenged Biden's effectiveness during his nearly five decades in Washington and tried to link his more moderate rival to the far-left flank of the Democratic Party. He launched a barrage of unsubstantiated corruption charges against Biden's son for work he did in Ukraine, as well as his addiction struggles, and he challenged Biden's intelligence.