Yesterday, Donald Trump was the candidate pushing for two additional debates, while Kamala Harris was taking a “wait and see” posture. In the wake of last night’s pummeling, they’ve switched places: Harris wants to go another round, while Trump is hemming and hawing: “I don’t know that I want to do another debate,” he said on Fox News this morning. Remarkably, the candidates have already crossed paths once again: Joe Biden, Harris, and Trump all attended a ceremony at Ground Zero in Manhattan today to commemorate the 23rd anniversary of the September 11 attacks. Harris and Trump shook hands. Happy Wednesday. Never Again Trump—Bill Kristol On June 27, at this year’s first presidential debate, Joe Biden lost his chance for a second term. Last night, at this year’s second presidential debate, Donald Trump may well have lost his chance for a second term. The evident fact is that last night Kamala Harris did well, and that Donald Trump was awful. As Trump surrogate and sycophant Lindsey Graham admitted to Tim Miller in the spin room, the debate was a “disaster” for Donald Trump. Even the talking heads on Fox News agreed. Could Trump recover from the disaster? Sure. It’s possible. His support seems immovable, meaning he’ll probably never be very far behind. Could Harris still falter? Perhaps. Does winning the debate mean winning the election? Of course not. There are eight long weeks left. There will still be plenty of moments in this campaign that will make us—or at least that will make me!—nervous. But we can’t unsee what we saw last night. And what we all saw is how radically unfit Donald Trump is to be president again. Indeed, media focus groups and private dial tests alike showed not merely that Harris won the debate; it also seems to be the case that the debate pushed a number of undecided voters, and even some soft Trump supporters, to shift towards Harris. Given how few undecided voters there are these days, this may amount only to a few percentage points of the electorate. But those few percentage points are obviously very important. The next week or two should see Kamala Harris benefitting from the momentum from the debate and opening up a lead in the presidential race. And so I think we can now say that it’s no longer a 50-50 proposition that Donald Trump will be our next president. Given how unhinged he showed himself to be last night, that is a very good thing. In light of what we all saw last night, I want to do something unusual here. I want to make a direct appeal to readers who don’t much like the Biden administration, who aren’t crazy about the Democratic Party, who aren’t sold on the Harris-Walz ticket, and who have been toying with sticking with or going back to Trump. You may have been Weekly Standard readers. You probably remain Wall Street Journal editorial page readers. You certainly aren’t Never Trump. You have been Maybe Trump or Reluctantly Trump or Perhaps-He-Wouldn’t-Be-So-Bad Trump. I say to you: Earnestly consider what happened in Philadelphia last night. Heck, watch the debate again, or read the transcript. And ask yourself: Do you honestly believe this man can and should lead the country for the next four years? Joe Biden did the right thing after his debate disaster and stepped aside. Donald Trump won’t do that. So he needs to be defeated. You who’ve been tempted to support him can still be anti-left and anti-woke. You can still be a believer in the virtues and even the glories of conservatism. But you also can do what you know is the right thing: Vote against the unhinged guy you saw yelling last night. Vote for sanity and decency on November 5th. You don’t need belatedly to become Never Trump. But after last night, you really should be Never Again Trump. A Man You Can Bait With a Tweet—Andrew Egger So. How did Kamala Harris win last night? Simple: She got under Trump’s skin. Over and over, Harris deployed the same formula. She’d answer a question from the moderators on her terms, hitting her marks and making the points she wanted to make. But along the way, she’d make a quick digression: dangling some shiny object for Donald Trump to fixate on. And time after time, he couldn’t help but take the bait. The result: He was perpetually embroiled in rhetorical dead ends while she was already onto the next thing. The first such moment may have been the most important, as it came during a segment on immigration—generally strong turf for Trump. Harris made an extended point about the bipartisan border security bill that fell apart earlier this year because Trump opposed it. But then she swerved: “I’m going to actually do something really unusual and I’m going to invite you to attend one of Donald Trump’s rallies,” she said, noting that “you will also see people leaving his rallies early out of exhaustion and boredom.” The moderators then went to Trump. Here was his moment to uncork one on a bill he previously described as a “horrible open borders betrayal of America.” “First let me respond as to the rallies,” Trump said:
On and on he went—and he wasn’t done there. Even when he tried to bring the answer back to immigration, he was rattled and angry enough that whatever disciplined message he’d planned went out the window. Instead of a takedown of the proposed border bill, what Trump offered was this:
Incredibly, he then spent the rest of his allotted time for that answer circling back around on how great his rallies are. Again, this during a section on immigration, supposedly his top focus. This happened repeatedly throughout the night:
In fact, four of the five individuals in the Central Park Five case recanted their confessions (saying they were coerced) and pleaded not guilty. But beyond the inaccuracy, what larger political gain did Trump make by going down that route? The answer, of course, is he made no gain at all. Americans know how they feel by now about Donald Trump; the person they’re still sizing up is Kamala Harris. And by constantly redirecting Trump back to his favorite topic—himself—she robbed him of a number of significant opportunities to go on the attack. Obviously, this all barely scratches the surface of last night’s two-hour shellacking. Have a favorite moment we didn’t discuss? Let us know in the comments. Quick Hits
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The Beginning of the End for Trump
September 11, 2024
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