PHILADELPHIA, Sept 11 (Reuters) -
Democrat Kamala Harris and Republican Donald Trump met on Tuesday for their
first and perhaps only debate, a square-off that could have a significant
impact on the Nov. 5 election as polls show a tight race.
Here are takeaways from the debate:
RILING HER RIVAL
Harris made a point to get under
Trump's skin, as her campaign had forecast - and it worked.
She urged viewers to attend a Trump
rally, where she said Trump would say bizarre things such as windmills cause
cancer (something he has, in fact, said) and where, she taunted, attendees
would leave out of exhaustion and boredom (something they have, in fact, done.)
Trump, who prides himself on the
crowds he draws, was clearly riled.
"My rallies, we have the biggest
rallies, the most incredible rallies in the history of politics," he said.
He accused Harris of busing in attendees to her rallies.
Trump then falsely claimed that
immigrants in the country illegally were killing and eating people's pets in
the city of Springfield, Ohio, an
unsubstantiated assertion that has circulated on social media
and been
amplified by Trump's vice presidential running mate JD Vance.
"In Springfield, they're eating
the dogs! The people that came in, they're eating the cats!" Trump said.
"They're eating the pets of the people that live there."
City officials in Springfield have
said those reports are untrue, which the ABC moderators pointed out after
Trump’s comments.
"Talk about extreme," Harris
responded, laughing.
PLAYING DEFENSE
Another of Harris’ goals, as a former
California prosecutor, was to call Trump out for his past actions, particularly
his efforts to overturn the 2020 election.
An hour into the debate, her strategy
appeared to be paying off. Trump was continually on the defensive.
Asked about the Jan. 6, 2021, siege of
the U.S. Capitol, he insisted he “had nothing to do with that, other than they
asked me to make a speech." He also maintained, falsely, that he had won
the 2020 election.
Harris used Trump's actions as an
argument for the country to turn the page, which she would do throughout the
evening.
"Donald Trump was fired by 81
million people, so let's be clear about that, and clearly he is having a very
difficult time processing that, but we cannot afford to have a president of the
United States who attempts as he did in the past to upend the will of the
voters in a free and fair election,” Harris said.
The vice president dug at Trump a
little more, saying world leaders were “laughing” at him and calling him a
disgrace – language that Trump has employed himself at rallies in reference to
how he says other countries view President Joe Biden.
A few minutes later, Trump erupted,
claiming Harris had received “no votes” in claiming the Democratic nomination
and suggesting she replaced Biden as part of some sort of coup.
“He hates her,” Trump said of Biden.
“He can’t stand her.”
The exchanges may have aided Harris'
argument that Trump, as she put it, lacks the “temperament” to be president.
'WEAPONIZED' JUSTICE
Trump and Harris accused each other of
conspiring to "weaponize" the Justice Department in a bid to go after
their enemies.
Trump said the indictments he faces
for conspiring to overturn his 2020 election loss and for his mishandling of
classified documents - as well as his conviction for forging documents related
to hush money payments to a porn star - are all the result of a conspiracy
cooked up by Harris and Biden. There is no evidence for that assertion.
Harris shot back by pointing out that
Trump has promised to prosecute his enemies if he wins a second term.
"Understand this is someone who
has openly said he would terminate, I'm quoting, terminate the
Constitution," Harris said.
The heated exchange underlined how
Harris and Trump see the stakes of this election as existential. Both claimed
their opponent to be a threat to democracy itself.
RACIAL DIVIDE
Deep into the debate, the
long-simmering topic of race came up. Trump was asked why he had publicly
questioned Harris’ dual heritage as a Black and South Asian woman.
“I don’t care what she is,” he
responded. “I read that she was Black. Then I read that she was not Black.”
Asked to respond, Harris accused Trump
of using race to divide Americans throughout his career. She cited how he and
his father turned away Black renters in the 1970s and how Trump led the public
outcry against five young Black and Latino men who were wrongly convicted of
assaulting a jogger in New York City's Central Park in 1989.
He also has openly questioned whether
President Barack Obama, who was born in the United States, was an American
citizen, Harris noted.
"I think it's a tragedy that we
have someone who wants to be president who has, consistently, over the course
of his career, attempted to use race to divide the American people," she
said.
"I think the American people want
better than that," Harris added. "We don't want a leader who is
constantly trying to have Americans point their fingers at each other."
Instead of trying to defend his
record, Trump pivoted back to the economy and sought to pin Biden’s economic
policies on Harris. “She’s trying to get away from Biden,” he said.
HANDSHAKE
Heading into the debate, there was a
question as to how Harris and Trump, who have never met, would greet each
other.
Harris settled the issue,
definitively. She walked over to Trump at his podium, extended her hand and
introduced herself as “Kamala Harris.”
It was an assertive way to approach a
man who has spent weeks insulting her with racist
and sexist attacks. Trump had no choice but to accept the gesture.
SPARRING ON THE ECONOMY
In the debate’s opening minutes, Trump
and Harris went to battle on one of the issues that is top of mind for voters:
the economy.
Harris detailed the economic policies
she has rolled out in recent weeks, which include a substantial
tax credit for small start-ups. Trump focused his comments on tariffs,
saying he would protect the American economy from unfair foreign competition.
While both sides got their jabs in,
Harris got to speak first on a topic where she trails Trump in terms of voter
trust. She appeared to force the former president onto his back foot, and Trump
essentially played defense on one of his strongest issues.
"She doesn't have a plan,"
Trump said, after Harris' opening comments. "It's like Run, Spot,
Run."
A SCHISM ON ABORTION
The two candidates also engaged in a
fractious debate about abortion, an issue where polls show Harris has the upper
hand.
Trump defended the U.S. Supreme
Court’s 2022 ruling that ended constitutional protection for abortion and sent
the issue back to individual states, arguing, incorrectly, that it was an
outcome desired by both Republicans and Democrats. Democrats have long
supported a constitutional right to abortion.
“I did a great service in doing it. It
took courage to do it,” Trump said.
Trump contended that some states allow
babies to be aborted after birth, a point corrected by ABC News moderator,
Linsey Davis.
Harris flashed some outrage at Trump’s
assertion that abortion becoming a states-rights issue was a popular result,
referring to states that have passed restrictive bans.
“This is what people wanted?” Harris
asked. “People being denied care in an emergency room because healthcare
providers are being afraid of being hauled off to jail?"
Trump was asked whether he would veto
a federal abortion ban if one were passed by Congress. He insisted a federal
ban would never happen.
WORLDS APART
One of the most heated policy
discussions came when Trump and Harris clashed over how they would handle
Russia's ongoing invasion of Ukraine.
The candidates' responses revealed the
degree to which their views on America's role in the world fundamentally
differ.
Trump refused to say he wanted Ukraine
to win the war, even as ABC moderator David Muir pushed him on the point,
saying only that he wanted to wrap up the conflict as soon as possible.
Harris shot back, arguing that what
Trump really wanted was Ukraine's quick and unconditional capitulation.
"If Donald Trump were president,
(Russian President Vladimir) Putin would be sitting in Kyiv right now,"
Harris said.
She also pushed back at Trump's claim
she had been sent by Biden to talk to Putin to resolve the conflict. Harris has
never met with Putin, but has met several times with Ukrainian President
Volodymyr Zelenskiy.
"I said at the beginning of this
debate, you're going to hear a bunch of lies coming from this fellow, and that
is another one," Harris said.
The Reuters Daily
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Reporting by
James Oliphant in Washington and Gram Slattery in Philadelphia; Editing by
Colleen Jenkins and Daniel Wallis
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