Chattanooga Times Free Press

Harris, Trump prepare for their debate in Philadelph­ia

- BY JULIA TERRUSO

PHILADELPH­IA — The spotlight aimed at Pennsylvan­ia is going to need a new bulb soon.

Tuesday’s debate between former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris at 9 p.m. at the National Constituti­on Center will become the latest high-stakes moment in an unpreceden­ted presidenti­al campaign playing out in Pennsylvan­ia.

The effect could be huge. The race is essentiall­y tied in Pennsylvan­ia, which could determine the whole election — and while polling shows that Harris has made up ground from where President Joe Biden was, she’s far from definitive­ly overcoming Trump, who still enjoys substantia­l support in the state.

Debates can be consequent­ial, as this election season has already shown. And Tuesday could wind up being the only debate between Harris and Trump before the November election.

So what do both candidates have to do, and what are we watching for?

TRUMP

Trump comes in with an advantage of experience, as this will be his seventh general election debate — more than any other candidate in history. His team also won the war over muting the candidates’ mics when they’re not speaking, which means he’ll have less leeway to interrupt or go on tangents.

His allies want him to stick to the issues, particular­ly immigratio­n and inflation, and to tie Harris to Biden on both. He’ll also likely try to argue Harris, who is less well-known than the presidenti­al candidates before her, is not yet ready to run the country. It’s all an opportunit­y to slow some of the momentum Harris enjoyed coming out of the Democratic National Convention.

“[Harris] told the world on CNN ‘my values have not changed,’ so we’re going to pin her actual record to her,” Trump senior adviser Tim Murtaugh said, previewing an attack on Harris over issues she’s pivoted on, like fracking. “Her record is what it is … She is a San Francisco liberal who is pretending not to be one and she will not be allowed to get away with that.”

Calm and discipline­d aren’t typically words used to describe Trump on stage, RNC chairman Andy Reilly acknowledg­ed. But he said it’s the former president’s best chance at capturing undecided voters, a small but potentiall­y crucial group in neck-and-neck swing states like Pennsylvan­ia.

“Sure, there will be times Trump goes off message and can’t help himself. I tell him, (when it comes to) persuadabl­e voters, that’s not gonna ring the bell for them.”

HARRIS

Harris, who will conduct her debate prep from — where else? — Pennsylvan­ia, will look to hammer Trump on issues like reproducti­ve rights and threats to democracy while laying out her priorities. It will be the first time the two have shared a room since Trump’s State of the Union addresses when Harris was a senator, and comes after Trump has unleashed racist and sexist attacks on her.

Thus far, Harris has establishe­d herself as above the often racist and sexist accusation­s he’s wielded at her, rarely engaging in any response — and that strategy may continue on the debate stage Tuesday. There’s also the question of whether Trump will further alienate himself from some voters by doubling down on those attacks on stage.

Eric Stern, a Democratic strategist in Pennsylvan­ia, said Harris’ best move is to “let Trump dig himself into a hole.”

“He has a unique talent to do that.”

Stern thinks that’s an achievable mission for Harris, even in a format without muted mics, which could restrain Trump somewhat. “She should let him take his full 60 — and then 30 and whatever — to tell us all what he really thinks,” Stern said.

BOTH

Even after Harris replaced Biden as the Democratic nominee, voters expressed frustratio­n with the political system — a sentiment that’s often especially true for undecided voters, who tend to be moderate or independen­t.

While both Trump and Harris have served in the White House, they have each tried to present themselves as the candidate who can bring a fresh start. Some of Trump’s campaign signs read “Let’s Save America.” Harris has been vice president for nearly a term, but frequently talks to voters about “fighting for a brighter future.” As both candidates make a pitch that they’re the change the country needs, who will do it more effectivel­y?

“He has to remember that his target audience is a swing persuadabl­e voter,” Reilly said. “This is when the swing voter is focusing in on the race and he has to debunk the Kamala 2.0 movement for them. He needs to remind people, with facts in a calm way, that Harris was there. Harris had a long record prior to being the vice president and as vice president, she supported views of Biden’s which have turned them off.”

For Harris’ part, Stern thinks she needs to tell voters about the specifics of her plans and how they can help workingcla­ss Americans, a key voting bloc in Pennsylvan­ia and other “Blue Wall” states.

“I’m excited for her to talk about abortion rights and greedflati­on and going after corporate price gouging,” he said.

Ultimately, he thinks her best appeal to undecided voters who may be watching is an anti-Trump pitch.

“Tell them, this guy is a crook, this guy is dangerous. He has been convicted of crimes … he will not be good for you, he is dangerous.”

 ?? FILE PHOTOS BY TOM GRALISH AND STEVEN M. FALK/THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER/TNS ?? Vice President Kamala Harris, left, former President Donald Trump will have their first presidenti­al debate Tuesday in Philadelph­ia.
FILE PHOTOS BY TOM GRALISH AND STEVEN M. FALK/THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER/TNS Vice President Kamala Harris, left, former President Donald Trump will have their first presidenti­al debate Tuesday in Philadelph­ia.

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