The Pine Bluff Commercial

General election debate sites set

Texas, Virginia, Utah chosen for 2024 presidential face-offs

WILL WEISSERT Information for this article was contributed by Jill Colvin of The Associated Press.

WASHINGTON — Three debates for next year’s presidential general election are set to be held in college towns in Texas, Virginia and Utah between Sept. 16 and Oct. 9 — though it remains to be seen whether either party’s candidate will actually participate.

The nonpartisan Commission on Presidential Debates (CPD) announced Monday that presidential candidates will first be scheduled to meet Sept. 16 at Texas State University in San Marcos, south of Austin. The vice presidential debate is scheduled nine days later at Lafayette College in Easton, Pa.

Presidential debates planned for Virginia State University in Petersburg on Oct. 1, and the University of Utah in Salt Lake City on Oct. 9, round out the schedule, less than a month before Election Day on Nov. 5.

“The United States’ general election debates, watched live worldwide, are a model for many other countries: the opportunity to hear and see leading candidates address serious issues in a fair and neutral setting,” CPD cochairs Frank Fahrenkopf and Antonia Hernández said in a statement. “This tradition remains unbroken since 1976. In 2024, students at our four debate sites will help bring another set of historic conversations to audiences here and abroad. And their campuses will anchor four unique chances to listen and learn.”

The nonprofit CPD was established in 1987 and has sponsored every general election presidential and vice presidential debates since. It does not receive federal funding or financial support from any political party or campaign.

The announcement comes despite the Republican National Committee’s mulling rules changes that would force presidential candidates seeking the party’s nomination to sign a pledge saying they will not participate in any debates the CPD sponsors.

Such a boycott would shake up the foundations of the way presidential elections have been conducted in the country for decades — though former President Donald Trump’s refusal to participate in primary debates while seeking his party’s 2024 nomination makes such shifts perhaps easier to imagine.

Yet, Trump has made clear he wants to debate President Joe Biden if he is the nominee.

“We have to debate,” he told Fox News host Bret Baier in a June interview. “He and I have to definitely debate. That’s what I love. The two of us have to debate.”

The RNC threatening not to participate comes after years of tension between the committee and the commission, which has been exacerbated by Trump. As president, he repeatedly accused the commission of unfair treatment and ultimately refused to participate in the second 2020 debate after objecting to its being held virtually because of the coronavirus pandemic.

In a letter to the commission last year, RNC Chair Ronna McDaniel voiced frustration with its response to several party complaints, including concerns about its selection of moderators, a desire for a debate before early voting starts and a push for changes to the commission’s board.

The commission responded to that letter by saying in a statement that it deals directly with candidates who qualify for participation in its debates, rather than the national leadership of each party.

“The CPD’s plans for 2024 will be based on fairness, neutrality and a firm commitment to help the American public learn about the candidates and the issues,” it said at the time.

National Democrats, meanwhile, have expressed frustration with the commission in 2020 over what they called its failing to enforce the rules when it came to Trump, as he and Biden were then competing for the presidency.

NATIONAL

en-us

2023-11-21T08:00:00.0000000Z

2023-11-21T08:00:00.0000000Z

https://edition.pbcommercial.com/article/281754159062048

WEHCO Media