bet168 Hot Microphones and No Audience: Here Are the Rules for the V.P. Debate

Updated:2024-09-28 06:17    Views:173

The brief era of muted microphones appears to be over.bet168

At Tuesday’s televised debate between Senator JD Vance of Ohio and Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota, each candidates’ microphone will be turned on throughout the 90-minute event, according to the debate’s sponsor, CBS News.

But the network said on Friday that its producers reserved the right to switch off the microphones if needed.

The rules — which both campaigns agreed to — are a tweak from this year’s two presidential debates, where microphones were turned off when the other candidate was speaking.

The nuances of microphone usage had turned into a bit of a kerfuffle before the debate earlier this month in Philadelphia between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald J. Trump, with their aides publicly bickering over the format. The rule was encouraged by President Biden’s team before the cycle’s first presidential debate in June, but Ms. Harris’s team wanted to change that (ultimately, microphones remained muted).

There appears to be less tension ahead of Tuesday’s matchup, which will be held at CBS’s studios in Midtown Manhattan, and simulcast on most major television networks. The moderators are Norah O’Donnell, the anchor of “CBS Evening News,” and Margaret Brennan, who hosts “Face the Nation.”

The rest of the rules, announced by CBS, are roughly comparable to the prior debates this year.

There will be no studio audience. Each candidate will stand at a lectern, the first time since 2008 that vice-presidential candidates have not sat at a table for their debate. (The moderators, though, will be seated.) The debate is set to last for 90 minutes, with two commercial breaks of four minutes apiece.

There will be no opening statements. Mr. Vance won a coin toss to determine the order of closing statements, and he chose to have the last word.

The candidates will be given two minutes to answer a moderator’s questionbet168, with their rival then granted two minutes to respond. “Then, each candidate gets one minute for further rebuttals,” the rules state. “At the discretion of the moderators, candidates may get an additional minute each to continue a discussion.”