Donald Trump refuses to take part in a virtual debate with Joe Biden

It comes after the nonpartisan debate commission decided the next event should take place virtually because of the president's diagnosis of COVID-19.

Donald Trump and Joe Biden

Donald Trump and Joe Biden will clash in duelling televised town halls. Source: AP

US President Donald Trump wants two face-to-face debates with challenger Joe Biden, his campaign said Thursday, nixing a proposed virtual encounter but calling for a final showdown just five days before election day.

The two rivals have clashed repeatedly over the issue, with Mr Biden's camp stressing Mr Trump can not "rewrite the calendar" of already-agreed dates for his benefit.

The second debate, scheduled as a town hall-styled event, was set for 15 October while the third and final encounter was due one week later.



That timeline was thrown into question after Mr Trump, who is still being treating for COVID-19, rejected the change to the second debate's virtual format. 

"I'm not going to do a virtual debate," Mr Trump told Fox Business News, moments after the nonpartisan Commission on Presidential Debates announced the changes.

An in-person town hall debate, with questions from voters, "should happen on October 22, and accordingly, the third debate should then be shifted back one week to October 29," just days from the 3 November vote, Trump 2020 campaign manager Bill Stepien said in a statement.
Mr Stepien also attacked the debate commission, saying it "wants to protect Joe Biden" by shifting to a virtual format so that voters would not be able to "directly question" the former vice president about his long record.

The commission said earlier it was making the change so as to "protect the health and safety of all involved."

It said the debate would have a town hall structure, with the candidates in remote locations.

The Biden campaign said early Thursday that the Democratic nominee looked forward to "speaking directly to the American people."



In a follow up statement deputy campaign manager Kate Bedingfield reminded voters that Mr Trump "doesn't make the debate schedule," and that both campaigns agreed to the three dates back in June.

"Trump's erratic behaviour does not allow him to rewrite the calendar, and pick new dates of his choosing," Ms Bedingfield said.


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Published 9 October 2020 5:54am
Updated 9 October 2020 6:21am
Source: AFP, SBS


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