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    US presidential debate moderator Chris Wallace struggles to contain Trump – video

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    Fox News host Chris Wallace, the moderator for the first 2020 US presidential debate, has faced criticism for struggling to rein in interruptions and outbursts from Donald Trump. Throughout the 90-minute broadcast on Tuesday night, the president continually broke the agreed rules of the debate, refused to stick to his own speaking time and steamrolled over both Wallace and Biden
    Trump plunges debate into chaos as he repeatedly talks over Joe Biden
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    Trump and Biden in bitterly personal clash at first presidential debate

    US elections 2020

    Candidates throw insults amid arguments over healthcare, coronavirus and supreme court
    First presidential debate: follow live

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    ‘This is so unpresidential’: tempers flare in first US presidential debate – video

    Donald Trump and Joe Biden sparred bitterly during the first presidential debate of the general election on Tuesday night, hurling personal insults as they clashed over healthcare, the coronavirus and the supreme court.
    Ignoring the rules, the candidates repeatedly interrupted each other, with Biden losing his patience at one point and retorting: “Will you shut up, man? This is so unpresidential.”
    At another point, Trump wrestled with the moderator, the Fox News anchor Chris Wallace, complaining: “I guess I’m debating you, not him. But that’s OK, I’m not surprised.”
    “The fact is that everything he’s said so far is simply a lie,” Biden said. “I’m not here to call out his lies. Everybody knows he’s a liar.”
    Trump, pressed on new revelations that he avoided paying federal taxes for years and paid only $750 in 2016 and 2017, claimed he had paid “millions of dollars” in taxes in those years. He bragged that he took advantage of tax loopholes and that as a successful businessman he didn’t “want to pay taxes”.
    Hours before the debate, held in Cleveland, Ohio, Biden and his running mate, Kamala Harris, released their 2019 tax returns. Breaking decades of precedent, Trump has refused to release his tax returns to the public.
    Both campaigns have spent weeks preparing for the matchup, which was expected to draw millions of viewers. In a segment on the coronavirus, Biden hammered Trump over his handling of the pandemic, which has claimed nearly 205,000 American lives.
    “Do you believe for a moment what he’s telling you, in light of all the lies he’s telling you, about Covid?” Biden asked.
    Ahead of the debate, Trump’s allies attempted to cast Biden as incoherent and fanned baseless online conspiracy theories that Biden requires cue cards or an earpiece to answer questions.
    In a statement, Trump’s communications director, Tim Murtaugh, alleged that Biden’s campaign had reneged on an agreement to a “pre-debate inspection for electronic earpieces” and that his team sought “multiple breaks during the debate, which President Trump doesn’t need”. Pointing to Trump’s demand that Biden submit to a drug test, a suggestion Biden laughed off, Murtaugh said it was clear the president’s opponent was looking for a “safety net” ahead of the debate.
    Biden’s campaign flatly denied the accusations.
    Speaking to reporters on Tuesday afternoon, the deputy campaign manager, Kate Bedingfield, observed that Trump’s team appeared “concerned that he will not do well tonight” and were “laying the groundwork for how they’re going to lie about why”.
    The debate was centered around six pre-determined topics, which included: the candidates’ records, the Covid-19 crisis, the economy, the supreme court, race and violence in American cities and the integrity of the election. Each topic will receive 15 minutes of discussion during the 90-minute affair.
    The debate was arguably Trump’s best opportunity to reset the presidential race in which he is currently behind. The economy is the sole issue where Trump retains a slight advantage over Biden, though even there his edge is slipping.
    Majorities of Americans consistently disapprove of Trump’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic and believe his response to the racial justice protests have only made matters worse.
    On election security, Trump may face scrutiny for his baseless attacks on mail-in balloting and attempts to undermine confidence in the electoral system. Polls show that Americans have lost faith in the electoral process, a sign that his efforts to sow doubt ahead of the election are resonating.
    Performance is equally, if not more, important than the discussion. And in both style and substance, Biden and Trump are opposites.
    Trump, ever the showman, has used past debates to shock and awe the audience with his unorthodox approach. The approach worked in 2016, when Trump defeated his better-prepared opponents. Biden, by contrast, delivered steady albeit less memorable performances in many of the Democratic primary debates. And yet, Biden emerged victorious from a field of agile debaters.
    Looming over the debate is whether anything either candidate says or does on Tuesday night will sway voters. While nearly three in four voters said they planned to watch the debate on Tuesday night, according to a recent Monmouth University poll, just 3% of voters said it was “very likely” to affect their vote in November.

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    Trump and Biden head to Ohio for first presidential TV debate – US politics live

    First presidential debate tonight in Cleveland, Ohio
    Debate offers Trump chance to yank stubbornly stable 2020 race his way
    US election to have far fewer international observers than planned
    Troubled Florida, divided US: will Trump hold this vital swing state?
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    Pennsylvania politicians go topless to warn voters: don't mail in 'naked ballots'

    Bethany Hallam thought the best way to dress up her message that votes are in danger of not being counted in the vital swing state of Pennsylvania was to strip it down to the basics, so she did – literally.“Do you want to get naked to save democracy?” fellow Allegheny county council member Olivia Bennett said Hallam asked her a few days ago.“I said: OK!” Bennett recalled, laughing.The two councilwomen recruited a third “badass”, state representative-elect Emily Kinkead, and posed for the camera, shedding their clothes and then posting the results on social media with their breasts hidden behind images of the “secrecy envelope” being sent out to Pennsylvanians along with their ballots for postal voting.If voters mail in their ballot without putting it first in the secrecy envelope and then putting that inside the outer, addressed envelope, the authorities will not count the vote and it will be discarded as a “naked ballot”. So Hallam and her allies wanted to warn voters of the threat.With Pennsylvania not normally allowing mass mail-in voting, and with the arcane rule about the extra envelope, officials warn that up to 100,000 votes mailed in the state during this coronavirus pandemic could end up being invalidated as naked ballots.As every ballot matters in a vital swing state with super-thin voting margins Hallam hit on the drastic idea of getting nude herself to highlight the issue.“Immediately when I heard the term naked ballots, and being a woman in the male-dominated environment of politics, where they are always trying to control our bodies, I thought, ‘Why not take some control back? And also get the voters’ attention,” Hallam told the Guardian.Hallam is the Democratic councilwoman at large for Allegheny county, which includes Pittsburgh. Obviously she wants Joe Biden to beat Donald Trump to the White House in November – and Trump won Pennsylvania by only around 44,000 votes in 2016 – but she said she’s keen to remind all voters that their vote should count, for the presidency and in a sheaf of down-ballot contests, too.“Races are sometimes decided by a handful of votes,” she said.Hallam said she had fun posing joyfully for her campaign to make every vote count.“It was empowering. And to stand alongside two other badass elected officials that I enjoy working with … we were having a blast and also helping voters,” she said.Hallam said some other Democrats have pledged to join in, some more elected women have planned to pose for similar pictures on Monday and, later in the week, some men. She’s extended the invitation to Republicans, but none has taken her up on it yet. And she wants the general public to join in.Since she, Bennett and Kinkead posted on a variety of social media platforms on Saturday more than a million people have viewed the posts.There have been many supportive comments but of course some backlash.Hallam said some guy called her parents’ home at 2am saying, “Your daughter’s tits are all over the internet”, which, technically, they aren’t.“And someone posted, ‘I hope you socialist sluts get raped’,” Hallam said.The women were neither surprised nor shaken.Some have commented on Bennett’s visible tattoo of Tinkerbell flying over the logo of the Pittsburgh Steelers.Bennett explained that she has always loved Disney and is a lifelong super fan of the Steelers, but added she’s been boycotting the NFL for four years since the league froze out Colin Kaepernick for his campaign to take a knee during the national anthem before games in order to highlight racism and police brutality.Meanwhile, she said she didn’t hesitate when Hallam asked her to disrobe for her no-naked-ballots drive.The two councilwomen often work together on their shared priority policies around criminal justice reform and police accountability, protecting the environment, promoting LGBTQ equality and protecting workers’ rights.Hallam beat out a 20-year council incumbent last year, running on a progressive platform, and also her experience as a millennial in recovery from drug dependency, which stemmed from being prescribed opioids for back-to-back sports injuries as a high schooler, and later spending time behind bars, including six months in county jail, for related offenses.Hallam said their naked ballots campaign is especially important right now because Pennsylvania primary races earlier this year allowed naked ballots to be counted, but then the state supreme court ruled that in November’s election, ballots not mailed in the additional secrecy envelope would not be counted.Hallam said: “It’s confusing unless you read the small print, and no-one does that. So I had an idea … ” More

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    Trump 'paid $750 in federal income taxes in 2016 and 2017' – video

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    A New York Times report into Donald Trump’s tax records has revealed he paid just $750 in federal income tax in his first year as president. Trump, who in 2016 suggested reports of tax avoidance showed he was ‘smart’, denounced the findings as ‘completely fake news’. The New York Times said that of the 18 years its reporters examined, Trump had paid no income tax at all in 11 of them.
    New York Times publishes Donald Trump’s tax returns in election bombshell
    Will the New York Times taxes report sink Donald Trump?
    Six key findings from the New York Times’ Trump taxes bombshell

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    Biden campaign throws urine jokes back at Trump’s drug test demand

    Joe Biden has laughed off Donald Trump’s demand that he take a drug test before the first presidential debate in Ohio on Tuesday.Chuckling when asked about the demand at a news conference on Sunday, Biden said: “He’s almost – no. I have no comment.”But the Biden campaign unloaded on Trump, saying the president apparently believed the best case for his re-election could be “made in urine”.“Vice-President Biden intends to deliver his debate answers in words,” a Biden spokesperson told Politico. “If the president thinks his best case is made in urine he can have at it.“We’d expect nothing less from Donald Trump, who pissed away the chance to protect the lives of 200,000 Americans when he didn’t make a plan to stop Covid-19.”Biden and Trump will debate on Tuesday, with Trump trailing badly in the polls and in fundraising, even as he is buffeted by scandal including a New York Times report revealing that he is hundreds of millions in debt and uses potentially fraudulent schemes to avoid paying taxes.Against such headlines, which were preceded by reports that Trump considered dead soldiers “losers” and “suckers”, and the emergence of a new sexual assault accusation, the president has been struggling to shift the focus to his opponent.Trump often casts accusations that he himself is vulnerable to, as when he accused Hillary Clinton of enabling sexual assault. At least 26 women have come forward with claims of sexual misconduct by Trump.Now Trump has repeated the same attack he used on Clinton, baselessly accusing Biden of planning to use drugs to goose his debate performance, after Trump and his campaign have attempted for months to portray Biden as a listless presence.Trump repeated the accusation at a news conference at the White House on Sunday, saying, “people say he was on performance-enhancing drugs”. He also tweeted a demand on Sunday that Biden take a drug test.In a previous false accusation against Biden, Trump allies on the right created a false controversy asserting that the former vice-president planned to skip the debate.Trump and Biden are scheduled to meet for 90 minutes at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio on Tuesday. The event will be hosted by Fox News’s Chris Wallace and is scheduled to begin at 9pm ET. More