The Debatable
Debates
Christian
Science Monitor
Editorial
Wednesday, September 22, 2004
After all the clatter of campaign
ads and stump speeches, voters this election year will soon be able to
watch the two main presidential candidates in three televised "debates."
But voters shouldn't be fooled.
These won't be the bona fide debates of the Lincoln-Douglas variety. Rather,
as in recent election years, they are tightly organized, first by the
politicized Commission on Presidential Debates (itself controlled by Democrats
and Republicans), and then through secret negotiations between the campaigns
in setting dates, places, and conditions.
And, in a Catch-22 set by the
commission, third-party candidates that might win high poll ratings if
they were allowed in the debates are excluded because they haven't reached
a high enough rating before the debates.
Still, the debates remain popular
because voters assume they will provide a close look at candidates as
they are grilled on important issues.
If only that were true.
The debates have become too staged
and the answers too canned. The decline in the authenticity of the debates
has resulted in a lower percentage of Americans watching them. Only 47
million people watched the last debate between George Bush and Al Gore,
compared with some 80 million who tuned in for the Carter-Reagan debates
in 1980.
If candidates routinely spoke
more freely and in less packaged ways to the press during the campaign,
the importance of these debates would diminish. Obviously, whenever candidates
can speak for themselves and show their unvarnished ability to support
their viewpoints substantively, the public is well served.
But neither George Bush nor John
Kerry has been particularly accessible to the political press, and thus
to the public, as they try to choose their questioners carefully.
Voters need as full an understanding
of the candidates' positions on issues as possible to make an informed
choice. Presidential debates should better reflect that notion.
Meantime, mark your calendars:
The first of three 90-minute debates will be held Sept. 30. The subject:
foreign policy. The second debate, Oct. 8, will be a town-hall forum with
voters chosen by the Gallup Organization asking the questions. The third,
on Oct. 13, will focus on domestic issues - likely to include the economy,
jobs, the environment, and healthcare. A vice-presidential debate will
be held Oct. 5.
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