
By Milton Kirby |Atlanta, Georgia – June 28, 2024
In an unprecedented showdown, President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump, the presumptive Democratic and Republican presidential nominees, faced off in their first debate for the 2024 election cycle at CNN’s studios in Atlanta on June 27, 2024. This marked the first debate between a sitting president and a former president since their contentious encounters in 2020.
The debate, moderated by CNN’s Jake Tapper and Dana Bash, was notably more structured than previous meetings, avoiding the near-constant interruptions that had plagued earlier encounters thanks to stricter debate rules. Despite this, the event was rich with intense exchanges and sharp criticisms. President Biden, at times, appeared to lose his train of thought. At the same time, Trump launched a series of unsubstantiated accusations and repeated several glaring lies.
One of the most heated moments occurred when Trump claimed, “People are coming in and killing our citizens at a level that we have never seen before. We call it migrant crime. I call it Biden migrant crime.” Trump did not provide evidence to support his accusation, a pattern that continued throughout the debate. He also alleged that Democrats want doctors to be able to abort babies after birth, a statement lacking factual basis.
Biden responded with emotional recollections, such as his World War II cemetery visit. He recounted, “I went to the World War II cemetery, he refused to go. He was standing with his four-star general, and he told me that he did not want to go in there because they were a bunch of losers and suckers. My son was not a loser and not a sucker. You’re the sucker; you’re the loser.”
On the January 6th Capitol riot, Biden asserted, “He encouraged those folks to go up on Capitol Hill.”
Criticism has been directed at CNN for the absence of real-time fact-checking during the debate. Trump spread numerous falsehoods about the economy, his involvement in the January 6 insurrection, and other issues, while Biden struggled to address these claims effectively. Observers questioned why Tapper and Bash did not interject to correct the record.
CNN’s political director, David Chalian, addressed this decision in a statement to The New York Times, explaining that a live debate “is not the ideal arena for live fact-checking.” This debate was unique as CNN, unlike previous years where an independent, nonprofit commission oversaw the debates, had full control over the event’s format, including the selection of moderators and the set’s design.
Despite the debate typically being held closer to the election in November, both candidates agreed to move it up this cycle to present their cases to the American public before early voting begins in September. Biden and Trump have agreed to participate in a second debate, scheduled for September 10, to be hosted by ABC.
The general election is set for November 5, 2024.