Make room for more detail — and a little blood
You watched last night’s debate and today you may be feeling pretty good about your candidate — or not so good.
But if you were an undecided voter looking for new insight before Nov. 4, did the debate help?
Here are suggestions for improving the format from two people with some expertise.
Dan Rather
Anchor of “Dan Rather Reports” on HD Net
Let’s tear down the structure and rebuild from the ground up. We might use as our model the debates that history remembers as the finest exemplars — those between Abraham Lincoln and Stephen A. Douglas in 1858, as the two vied for one of Illinois’ seats in the U.S. Senate.
These confrontations followed classic forensic structure — resolutions, followed by rebuttals, followed by surrebuttals. As for moderation, let’s get journalists and their questions out of the picture. This format would need a timekeeper or referee and little more. The topics could be determined beforehand by the debate organizers or by the candidates.
And let’s allow plenty of time for detailed, developed elucidations and examinations of policy. No more should an ill-informed candidate be able to filibuster through an allotted minute without answering the question. In every case, the opposing candidate will be on hand to provide a check to falsehoods, obfuscation and spin.
Bill O’Reilly
Host of “The O’Reilly Factor” on the Fox News Channel
The problem is that the moderators are too nice. These men and women were chosen to lob questions chiefly because of their civility. They ask heavily prepared questions; the candidates answer what they want. The journalists follow up; the candidates answer what they want. To quote Linda Ellerbee, “And so it goes.”
Debates should be confrontational and a bit raucous. Interrupting candidates who wander is necessary. Challenging candidates who stretch the truth or attempt to filibuster should be part of the format.
But you can forget about that because any cross-examination of the candidates is severely limited by the rules. Those rules save politicians, who know they can spin their back pockets off and only one follow-up will come their way.
So I will watch the spectacle because I am paid to do that. But until the rules are changed and obnoxious people are hired as questioners, little will be revealed. As Walter Cronkite said, “That’s the way it is.”
Los Angeles Times
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