CBS News says it will be up to Vance and Walz to fact-check each other
in veep debate
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[September 28, 2024]
By DAVID BAUDER
NEW YORK (AP) — CBS News, hosting vice presidential candidates JD Vance
and Tim Walz for the general election campaign's third debate next week,
says it will be up to the politicians — not the moderators — to check
the facts of their opponents.
The 90-minute debate, scheduled for 9 p.m. Eastern on Tuesday in a
Manhattan studio that once hosted the children's program “Captain
Kangaroo,” will be moderated by the outgoing “CBS Evening News” anchor
Norah O'Donnell and “Face the Nation” host Margaret Brennan.
During ABC's debate between presidential contenders Kamala Harris and
Donald Trump earlier this month, network moderators on four occasions
pointed out inaccurate statements by Trump, and none by Harris. That
infuriated the former president and his supporters, who complained it
was unfair.
Last spring, CNN moderators did not question any facts presented by
Trump and President Joe Biden in the debate where Biden's poor
performance eventually led to him dropping out of the race.
On Friday, CBS said the onus will be on Vance and Walz to point out
misstatements by the other, and that “the moderators will facilitate
those opportunities” during rebuttal time. The network said its own
misinformation unit, CBS News Confirmed, will provide real-time
fact-checking during the debate on its live blog and on social media,
and on the air during post-debate analysis.
With its plans, CBS News is clearly indicating it wants to take a step
back from the heat generated by calling attention to misleading
statements by candidates. Some argue that offstage fact-checking is too
little, too late and not seen by many people who watch the event.
It's not the first time
Angie Drobnic Holan, director of the international fact-checking network
at the Poynter Institute, said she has seen examples of moderators who
have successfully encouraged candidates to keep their opponents honest.
“I'll be interested in seeing how this works in practice,” she said.
"Having said that, you're basically off-loading one of your journalistic
responsibilities onto the candidates themselves, so I don't think that
it's ideal. It takes journalistic courage to be willing to fact-check
the candidates, because the candidates are absolutely going to complain
about it. I don't think the moderators' first goal is to avoid
controversy.”
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This combination of images shows Republican vice presidential
nominee Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, at left in Erie, Pa., Aug. 28, 2024,
and Democratic vice presidential candidate Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz
speaking at the DNC in Chicago, Aug. 21, 2024, in Chicago. (AP
Photo)
During the ABC debate, moderators David Muir and Linsey Davis
corrected Trump statements on abortion, the 2020 election, crime
statistics and reports that immigrants in Ohio were eating pets.
Unlike the two presidential debates, the two sides agreed that the
vice presidential candidates' microphones will not be turned off
while their opponent is speaking, increasing the chance for genuine
back-and-forth exchanges and the risk that the two men will talk
over each other. CBS says it reserves the right to shut off a “hot
mic” when necessary. Each candidate will have two minutes for a
closing statement, with Vance winning a virtual coin toss and
choosing to get the last word.
The stakes are high for CBS News
It's a big moment for CBS News, long mired in third place in the
evening news ratings. O'Donnell just announced she was stepping down
from the role. Brennan is considered a rising star.
Like with the presidential debates, CBS is making its feed available
for other networks to televise, and many are expected to take
advantage of the opportunity.
There will be no audience when Vance and Walz meet at a West Side
studio that, in its past, has hosted editions of “60 Minutes,” “CBS
Sunday Morning,” “Inside the NFL," “Geraldo” and “Captain Kangaroo.”
It's not known whether there will be other opportunities to see
Trump and Harris together on the same stage before the Nov. 5
election. Harris has accepted an invitation from CNN for another
debate on Oct. 23, but Trump has rejected it. In a poll taken by
Quinnipiac University and released earlier this week, likely voters
said by roughly a two-to-one margin that they'd like them face off
again.
CBS' “60 Minutes” is looking to land both Harris and Trump for
back-to-back interviews that will air on Oct. 7, but neither
candidate has committed to it yet.
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