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2016 United States presidential debates

The 2016 United States presidential debates were a series of debates held for the presidential election. The Commission on Presidential Debates (CPD), a bipartisan organization formed in 1987, organized three debates among the major presidential candidates. The first of these presidential debates took place on September 26, 2016, and set the record as the most-watched debate in American history, with 84 million viewers. The second debate took place on October 9, and the third took place on October 19. All CPD debates occurred from approximately 9 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. EDT (6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. PDT). Only the Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton and the Republican nominee Donald Trump met the criteria for inclusion in the debates, and thus were the only two to appear in the debates sponsored by the Commission on Presidential Debates. The CPD-sponsored vice presidential debate took place on October 4, 2016. Only Democratic nominee Tim Kaine and Republican nominee Mike Pence appeared in it.

2016 United States presidential debates

← 2012 September 26 – October 19, 2016 2020 →

Commission on Presidential Debates-sponsored debates edit

The Commission on Presidential Debates stipulates three criteria for eligibility for the presidential debates: constitutional eligibility to serve as president, appearance on enough ballots to potentially reach 270 electoral votes, and an average at least 15% on five selected national polls.[1] For the vice-presidential debate, the running mates of the presidential candidates qualifying for the first presidential debate will be invited.[1] By mid-September Hillary Clinton, Donald Trump, Gary Johnson, and Jill Stein were on enough ballots to reach 270 electoral votes; however, only Clinton and Trump had reached the 15% polling threshold.[2] As of August 2016, Johnson and Stein had polled as high as 13% and 7%, respectively, and had an average of 8.3% and 3%, respectively.[3]

On August 15, the CPD announced that it would use the most recent CBS/The New York Times, Fox News, CNN/Opinion Research Corporation, NBC/The Wall Street Journal, and ABC/The Washington Post polls for the debate criteria and that candidates must be at an average of 15% in these polls.[4][5]

On September 16, the commission announced the official invitation of both Clinton and Trump to participate in the first debate to be held on September 26 at Hofstra University, but Johnson and Stein did not meet the established criteria, and would not be participants in the debate.[6][7] The commission also confirmed that Clinton and Trump had committed to participate. It was also announced that Mike Pence and Tim Kaine would be participating in the only scheduled vice presidential debate, to take place at Longwood University on October 4.[6][7] The 15% threshold was reapplied with polling numbers following the first debate in order to judge the participants in the second debate on October 9.[7]

Moderators for the four debates were announced September 2, 2016.[8]

Topics addressed and not addressed edit

Over the combined six hours of debate time at the three presidential debates and one vice presidential debate, the issues most raised in moderators' questions were the Syrian civil war (six questions) and terrorism (four questions).[9] U.S.-Russia relations, immigration, job creation, Trump's taxes, and Trump's lewd leaked recording controversy were each asked about in three questions, and Clinton's emails, the Supreme Court, Social Security, taxation of the wealthy, the national debt, Iraq, the Affordable Care Act, "uniting the country," nuclear weapons, and the legitimacy of the election, were each the subject of two questions.[9] A number of issues were the subject of a single question, including expectations of police conduct, race relations, abortion, gun policy, "birtherism," jobs in the energy industry, cyberterrorism, Islamophobia, the Clinton Foundation, the Donald J. Trump Foundation, the strengths of the candidates' opponents, the skills of the vice presidential nominees, the candidate's faith, the low favorability ratings of both candidates, the paid speeches given by Clinton, Trump's Twitter posts, Clinton's "basket of deplorables" remark, Clinton's "look," and the candidates' behavior.[9]

The debate moderators failed to ask a question about climate change at any of the three debates,[9] although Clinton did touch on the issue twice as part of responses to other questions.[10] The moderators' failure to address the issue prompted complaints by commentators.[11][12] David Leonhardt of The New York Times termed it "a failure of journalism" and a "a grievous error."[13] Prominent climate scientists Kerry Emanuel and Michael E. Mann, as well as activist group 350.org, criticized the failure of the debates to address the issue.[14]

A number of other issues were either addressed sparingly or not at all:

Speaking time edit

Speaking time at the debates was as follows:

  • At the first presidential debate, Trump spoke for 45 minutes and 3 seconds; Clinton spoke for 41 minutes and 50 seconds.[18]
  • At the second presidential debate, Trump spoke for 40 minutes and 10 seconds; Clinton spoke for 39 minutes and 5 seconds.[18]
  • At the third presidential debate, Trump spoke for 35 minutes and 41 seconds; Clinton spoke for 41 minutes and 46 seconds.[18]

Overall, Clinton spoke for 107 seconds longer than Trump.

Polling edit

The following polls were conducted prior to each of the respective debates, and determined the candidates who participated in each debate.

Candidates in green participated in the debate, while those in red were excluded. Italics denotes the leading candidate in the respective poll.

First presidential debate edit

The following polls were the most recent conducted prior to September 16, 2016, the polling deadline for both the first presidential debate and only vice presidential debate:

Poll Date taken Hillary Clinton
Tim Kaine
Democratic
Donald Trump
Mike Pence
Republican
Gary Johnson
William Weld
Libertarian
Jill Stein
Ajamu Baraka
Green
ABC/The Washington Post[19] September 5–8 46% 41% 9% 2%
CBS/The New York Times[20] September 9–13 41% 41% 8% 4%
CNN/Opinion Research Corporation[21] September 1–4 43% 45% 7% 2%
Fox News[22] September 11–14 41% 40% 8% 3%
NBC/The Wall Street Journal[23] July 31 – August 3 43% 34% 10% 5%
Average[24] July 31 – September 14 42.8% 40.2% 8.4% 3.2%

Second presidential debate edit

The following polls were the most recent conducted prior to October 4, 2016, the polling deadline for the second presidential debate:

Poll Date taken Hillary Clinton
Democratic
Donald Trump
Republican
Gary Johnson
Libertarian
Jill Stein
Green
ABC/The Washington Post[25] September 19–22 46% 44% 5% 1%
CBS/The New York Times[26] September 28 – October 2 45% 41% 8% 3%
CNN/Opinion Research Corporation[27] September 28 – October 2 47% 42% 7% 2%
Fox News[28] September 27–29 43% 40% 8% 4%
NBC/The Wall Street Journal[29] September 16–19 43% 37% 9% 2%
Average[30] September 16 – October 2 44.8% 40.8% 7.4% 2.6%

Third presidential debate edit

The following polls were the most recent conducted prior to October 14, 2016, the polling deadline for the third presidential debate:

Poll Date taken Hillary Clinton
Democratic
Donald Trump
Republican
Gary Johnson
Libertarian
Jill Stein
Green
ABC/The Washington Post[25] September 19–22 46% 44% 5% 1%
CBS/The New York Times[26] September 28 – October 2 45% 41% 8% 3%
CNN/Opinion Research Corporation[27] September 28 – October 2 47% 42% 7% 2%
Fox News[31] October 10–12 45% 38% 7% 3%
NBC/The Wall Street Journal[32] October 8–10 46% 37% 8% 2%
Average[33] September 19 – October 12 45.8% 40.4% 7.0% 2.2%

Debate list edit

All presidential debates (including the vice presidential debate) ran from 9:00 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. EDT.[34]

2016 United States presidential election debates
 No. Date and time Host Location Moderator Participants
Key:
 P  Participant  
Democratic Republican
Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton
of New York
Businessman
Donald Trump
of New York

1
 
Monday, September 26, 2016[7]

9:00 – 10:30 p.m. EDT[35]

Hofstra University Hempstead, New York Lester Holt of NBC P P

2
 
Sunday, October 9, 2016,

9:00 – 10:30 p.m. EDT[35]

Washington University in St. Louis St. Louis, Missouri Martha Raddatz of ABC and
Anderson Cooper of CNN
P P

3
 
Wednesday, October 19, 2016,

9:00 – 10:30 p.m. EDT[35]

UNLV Paradise, Nevada Chris Wallace of Fox News P P
2016 United States vice presidential debate
 No. Date and time Host Location Moderator Participants
Key:
 P  Participant  
Democratic Republican
Senator
Tim Kaine
of Virginia
Governor
Mike Pence
of Indiana

VP
 
Tuesday, October 4, 2016[7]

9:00 – 10:30 p.m. EDT[35]

Longwood University Farmville, Virginia Elaine Quijano of CBS P P

September 26 presidential debate (Hofstra University) edit

Presidential debate
 
The set of the first debate
Date(s)September 26, 2016 (2016-09-26)
Duration95 minutes
VenueHofstra University
LocationHempstead, New York
ParticipantsHillary Clinton
Donald Trump
FootageNBC
C-SPAN
Bloomberg Politics
Moderator(s)Lester Holt of NBC
TranscriptCommission on Presidential Debates
Politico
The Washington Post
Fact checkingFactCheck.org
PolitiFact
NPR
The New York Times
Associated Press March 3, 2017, at the Wayback Machine
Bloomberg Politics
Websitehofstra.edu/debate

The first debate took place on Monday, September 26, at New York's Hofstra University, moderated by Lester Holt of NBC. It was originally scheduled to take place at Wright State University, but the venue was changed due to security and financial concerns.[36]

 
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
New York
 
Businessman Donald Trump
New York

Format edit

The first presidential debate was divided into six segments, each of approximately 15 minutes in length, with the moderator introducing a topic and giving each candidate two minutes, followed by approximately 8 minutes and 45 seconds of facilitated discussion between the two candidates, with both candidates receiving approximately equal time. The questions discussed during the 90 minutes were at the sole discretion of the moderator, and were not shared beforehand with the commission or with either campaign. Each candidate spoke in front of a podium. Besides applause at the beginning and end of the debate, there was no audience participation allowed, but sporadic applause occurred at various points throughout the 90 minutes.[37]

The segments were on the economy and job creation, trade, the federal deficit, race relations and policing, the war on terror, the foreign policy of the United States, and each candidate's experience in the political and business realm.[38]

Reception edit

Writing on September 28, FiveThirtyEight found that every scientific poll to that point had suggested that voters thought Hillary Clinton performed better than Donald Trump in the debate.[39] A CNN/ORC poll of debate viewers found that 62% believed Clinton won, compared to 27% for Trump.[40] A poll conducted by Public Policy Polling found that 51% thought Clinton won the debate, while 40% thought Trump won.[41] A YouGov poll found that 57% of Americans declared Clinton the winner, while 30% declared Trump the winner.[42] A Politico/Morning Consult poll showed that 49% of likely voters thought that Clinton won the debate, while 26% thought that Trump won, and 25% were undecided.[43] Echelon Insights polling showed that Clinton won the debate 48–22, and that the debate made 41% of respondents more likely to vote for Clinton while 29% were more likely to vote for Trump.[44] A Reuters/Ipsos poll found that 56% of Americans thought Clinton did better, while 26% thought Trump did.[45] An NBC News/SurveyMonkey poll shows that 52% of likely voters who followed the debate chose Clinton was the winner, 21% chose Trump, and 26% did not choose either candidate.[46] A Gallup poll showed that more respondents thought Clinton did a better job than Trump by a margin of 61% to 27%.[47] A Fox News poll shows that 61% of respondents thought that Clinton won the debate while 21% said Trump did.[48] An ABC News/The Washington Post poll shows that 53% of respondents thought that Clinton won the debate while 18% said Trump did.[49] A CBS News poll shows that 32% of likely voters say that they thought better of Clinton after watching the debate, but only 10% of voters said that they thought better of Trump afterward.[50]

A panel of Los Angeles Times analysts consisting of Doyle McManus and two others found that Clinton won all six of the debate segments.[51] Among swing-state party officials and strategists surveyed by Politico, 79% agreed that Trump did not win the debate.[52]

Moderation edit

The performance of Lester Holt as moderator of the debate received mixed reactions, with political critics stating that Holt struggled to keep control of the debate, and although he challenged both candidates, Holt's repeated attempts to get the candidates to adhere to the time restrictions were ignored.[53]

Michael M. Grynbaum of The New York Times described Holt's performance by stating "He was silent for minutes at a time, allowing Hillary Clinton and Donald J. Trump to joust and bicker between themselves—and sometimes talk right over him—prompting some viewers to wonder if Mr. Holt had left the building." He continued, "Being less conspicuous often means attracting less criticism, and Mr. Holt's conservative approach seemed designed to avoid the opprobrium that befell his NBC colleague, Matt Lauer, whose performance at a forum this month was widely panned after he repeatedly interrupted Mrs. Clinton and failed to challenge Mr. Trump."[54] Hadas Gold of Politico wrote "Lester Holt was on an island on Monday night. And for most of the first presidential debate, he stayed there, letting the battleships of Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump shoot their missiles at one another. It made for some memorable exchanges between Trump and Clinton, matched in close-up on most networks. For some debate watchers, that's what they want their moderators to do: say 'go' and let them run. But it also left some gaps where viewers probably expected sharp questions."[55]

Viewership edit

The debate set the record as the most-watched debate in television history, with 84 million viewers across the 13 channels that carried it live and were counted by Nielsen, surpassing the previous record of 80.6 million viewers set by the debate between Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan in 1980. These numbers do not account for the millions of viewers who watched the debates online and the people who watched the debate at parties, bars, restaurants, and offices.[56] Two million concurrent viewers watched it live on YouTube, while there were 8 million views on Facebook (whose numbers do not break down into unique viewers); in addition, 1.4 million unique viewers watched it live on CBS's streaming service.[57] All debate-related video on YouTube exceeded 88 million views on October 3, 2016.[57] CNN Digital reported 2.4 million live streams,[58] and Yahoo News reported 5 million views, both live and on-demand.[59]

Vice presidential debate (Longwood University) edit

Vice presidential debate
 
The debate's spin room
Date(s)October 4, 2016 (2016-10-04)
Duration92 minutes
VenueLongwood University
LocationFarmville, Virginia
ParticipantsTim Kaine
Mike Pence
FootageCBS
C-SPAN
Bloomberg Politics
Moderator(s)Elaine Quijano of CBS
TranscriptCommission on Presidential Debates
The New York Times
The Washington Post
Fact checkingPolitiFact
NPR
ABC News
The New York Times
Associated Press
Websitedebate.longwood.edu
2016 Vice-Presidential debate
 
← 2012 October 4, 2016 2020 →
     
Nominee Tim Kaine Mike Pence
Party Democratic Republican
Home state Virginia Indiana

The vice presidential debate took place on Tuesday, October 4, at Virginia's Longwood University, moderated by Elaine Quijano of CBS.

Format edit

The candidates were seated at a table with Quijano. The debate consisted of nine segments, each 10 minutes in length. Both candidates were given two minutes to respond to questions, with the remaining time used for a deeper discussion of the topic. Quijano asked questions about Donald Trump's temperament, the economy, Social Security, police and race relations, nuclear weapons, abortion and religious faith.

Reception edit

A CNN instant-poll found that 48% of viewers believed Pence had won while 42% thought Kaine won.[64] Pence was criticized after the debate for not defending Donald Trump's comments,[65] while Kaine was criticized for being too aggressive and interrupting.[66]

Two hours before the debate took place, the website of the Republican National Committee declared Pence the clear winner, writing "During the debate we helped fact check and monitor the conversation in real time @GOP." The post went on to say that his strong points concerned the economy and Clinton's alleged "scandals". The post was removed prior to the start of the debate, but not before getting widespread press and social media attention.[67][68][69]

Rachel Maddow of MSNBC said that the debate was occasionally "incomprehensible" due to the number of times that the candidates interrupted each other.[70] According to ABC News, Kaine interrupted seventy times throughout the debate, while Pence interrupted forty times.[71]

Moderation edit

Elaine Quijano moderated and thereby became the first Asian American to moderate a U.S. debate for national elected office in the general election,[72] and the youngest journalist to moderate a debate since 1988.[73] It was also the first time a digital network anchor had been selected to moderate a national debate.[74]

Viewership edit

 
Patrons of a Philadelphia pub watching the debates

According to Nielsen, the four broadcast networks and the three largest cable news channels averaged around 36 million viewers.[75]

October 9 presidential debate (Washington University in St. Louis) edit

Presidential debate
 
The set of the second debate
Date(s)October 9, 2016 (2016-10-09)
Duration90 minutes
VenueWashington University in St. Louis
LocationSt. Louis, Missouri
ParticipantsHillary Clinton
Donald Trump
FootageNBC
CBS
C-SPAN
Bloomberg Politics
Moderator(s)Anderson Cooper of CNN
Martha Raddatz of ABC News
TranscriptCommission on Presidential Debates
Politico
The New York Times
Fact checkingFactCheck.org
PolitiFact
NPR
The New York Times
Websitedebate.wustl.edu

The second presidential debate took place on Sunday, October 9, at Washington University in St. Louis, moderated by Martha Raddatz of ABC News, and Anderson Cooper of CNN.[76]

Format edit

The debate was conducted in a "town meeting" format on Sunday, October 9, with an audience of uncommitted voters selected by the Gallup Organization. The CPD originally stipulated that half of the questions come from the audience, while the other half would come from the moderators "based on topics of broad public interest as reflected in social media and other sources."[77] The Commission subsequently invited members of the public to submit and vote on questions through the bipartisan Open Debate Coalition's website. Moderators chose from the 30 most popular questions.[78] CNN's Anderson Cooper and ABC's Martha Raddatz were the moderators. Candidates had two minutes to respond with an additional minute for the moderator to facilitate further discussion.[77]

Content edit

Members of the audience were allowed to ask questions. The eight questions, in order, were:[79]

  1. "The last presidential debate could have been rated as MA, mature audiences per TV parental guidelines. Knowing that educators assign viewing the presidential debates as students’ homework, do you feel you are modelling appropriate and positive behavior for today's youth?"
  2. "The Affordable Care Act known as Obamacare, it is not affordable. Premiums have gone up, deductibles have gone up, copays has gone up, prescriptions have gone up and the coverage has gone down. What will you do to bring the cost down and make coverage better?"
  3. "There are 3.3 million Muslims in the United States and I'm one of them. You've mentioned working with Muslim nations. But with Islamophobia on the rise, how will you help people like me deal with the consequences of being labelled as a threat to the country after the election is over?"
  4. "What specific tax provisions will you change to ensure the wealthiest Americans pay their fair share in taxes?"
  5. "Do you believe you can be a devoted president to all the people in the United States?"
  6. "Perhaps the most important aspect of this election is the Supreme Court justice. What would you prioritize as the most important aspect of selecting a Supreme Court justice?"
  7. "What steps will your energy policy take to meet our energy needs, while at the same time remaining environmentally-friendly and minimizing job loss for fossil power plant workers?" - this question was asked by audience member Ken Bone (see below).
  8. "Regardless of the current rhetoric, would either of you name one positive thing that you respect in one another?"

The first portion of the content was dominated by discussion of a tape of Trump making lewd comments about women to Billy Bush, which had been leaked two days earlier. Trump attempted to deflect criticism by making counter-accusations of sexual misconduct against Bill Clinton. Trump had invited four people who had accused Bill Clinton of sexual assault to a press conference prior to the debate and accused Hillary Clinton of attacking those same women.[80] At one point in the debate, Trump raised the issue of Hillary Clinton's emails. Trump stated that if elected, he would appoint a special prosecutor to investigate Secretary Clinton in relation to the matter. Clinton responded by remarking that the country was lucky that someone with Trump's temperament was not in charge of the law, to which Trump promptly responded, "because you'd be in jail." The audience cheered this line, to which Cooper interrupted the debate and warned the audience to refrain from making noise. An array of scholars, including political scientists and law professors, criticized Trump's pledge to imprison Clinton, saying that it reflected an anti-democratic impulse.[81][82]

Reception edit

A Politico/Morning Consult poll showed that 42% of respondents considered Clinton the winner of the debate, while 28% considered Trump the winner, and a slightly higher percentage (30%) were undecided.[83] A CNN/ORC poll found that 57% of viewers believed Clinton won, compared to 34% for Trump, despite the fact that most respondents felt that the latter exceeded expectations.[84] An NBC News/SurveyMonkey poll showed that Clinton won the debate with 44% to Trump's 34%, while 21% said neither won.[85] A Reuters/Ipsos poll found that 53% of viewers said Clinton won while 32% said Trump won.[86] According to a Gallup poll, 53% of viewers considered Clinton to be the winner while 35% considered Trump the winner.[87] A Fox News poll of debate watchers found 52% considered Clinton the winner compared to 39% for Trump, with 9% saying they tied or did not know.[88] A Baldwin Wallace University Community Research Institute (CRI) poll of likely Ohio voters showed that 52% found that Clinton won the debate, 31% that Trump won, and 17% found that it was a tie.[89] According to a Qriously poll of likely voters in eight key battleground states, 44% gave the win to Clinton while 33% gave it to Trump.[90] According to a Fox 2 Detroit/Mitchell Poll of likely Michigan voters, 48% gave the win to Clinton while 36% gave it to Trump.[91]

Trump's claim that he won the second debate with Hillary Clinton "in a landslide" in "every poll" was found to be false by Politifact, which noted that "not only did Trump not win by a landslide margin, he didn't win any of the polls at all".[92]

Ken Bone phenomenon edit

 
Ken Bone

Questioner Ken Bone, a power plant operator from Illinois, had a media presence and became an Internet meme in the days following the debate. His rise to popularity was due to his name, his red sweater, and his use of a disposable camera prior to and after the debate. Bone appeared on ESPN College GameDay and @midnight. He was portrayed by Bobby Moynihan during the cold open of NBC sketch comedy show Saturday Night Live's October 15 episode, dancing to the song "Get Ready for This".[93] Bone received a short-term endorsement deal with American transportation network company Uber to promote the launch of Uber Select in St. Louis.[94] A backlash against Bone happened after controversial posts under his username on Reddit were revealed.[95][96]

Viewership edit

According to Nielsen, approximately 66.5 million people watched the second presidential debate on television across 11 networks.[97] YouTube reported 1.5 million peak live streams and 124 million views on debate-related videos as of October 11.[98]

October 19 presidential debate (University of Nevada, Las Vegas) edit

Presidential debate
Date(s)October 19, 2016 (2016-10-19)
Duration93 minutes
VenueUniversity of Nevada, Las Vegas
LocationParadise, Nevada
ParticipantsHillary Clinton
Donald Trump
FootageCBS
NBC
C-SPAN
Moderator(s)Chris Wallace of Fox News
TranscriptCommission on Presidential Debates
The Washington Post
The New York Times
Fact checkingThe Washington Post
The New York Times
PolitiFact
NPR
CBS News March 23, 2021, at the Wayback Machine
Websiteunlv.edu/2016debate

The third debate took place on Wednesday, October 19, at 6:00 PM PDT at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas,[101] between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump.[102]

Format edit

The format mirrored that of the first debate: 90 minutes divided into six topical segments of approximately 15 minutes each. The moderator began each segment with a question and gave each candidate two minutes, followed by facilitated discussion between the two candidates, with each receiving approximately equal time. Questions were at the sole discretion of the moderator. Each candidate was stationed at a podium. Audience participation was confined to applause at the beginning and end of the debate.[37]

Moderation edit

The debate was moderated by Chris Wallace of Fox News Channel's Fox News Sunday.[103] This marked the first instance when a Fox News host moderated a presidential debate.

The topics, announced in advance of the debate, were: debt and entitlements, immigration, economy, Supreme Court, foreign hot spots, and fitness to be president.[104]

Reception edit

A Morning Consult/Politico poll found that 43% of respondents considered Clinton the winner of the debate, with 26% saying Trump.[105] An NBC/SurveyMonkey poll showed that 46% of respondents considered Clinton as the winner, where as 37% considered Trump the winner.[106] An ABC News poll found that 52% of likely voters thought that Clinton was the winner, with 29% saying that Trump won the debate.[107] A Gallup poll showed that Clinton beat Trump 60% to 31% in perceptions of who won debate.[108] A poll by the CBS News Battleground Tracker of viewers in 13 swing states found that 49% of voters in those states thought that Clinton won the debate, while 39% thought Trump won, with 12% calling it a tie.[109]

Trump's use of the phrases "bad hombres" and "nasty woman" spurred massive viral backlash.[110][111][112][113]

An Associated Press/GfK poll, which asked respondents about the candidates' performance in all three debates, found that 69% thought that Clinton performed better while 29% thought that Trump did.[114]

Viewership edit

According to Nielsen, approximately 71.6 million people watched the third presidential debate on television across 13 networks.[115][116] YouTube reported 1.7 million peak live streams and 140 million views on debate-related videos as of October 20.[117]

Free & Equal Elections Foundation-sponsored debate edit

The Free & Equal Elections Foundation hosted a single presidential debate in 2016. It was held at the University of Colorado Boulder's Macky Auditorium on October 25, 2016.[118] The debate was co-hosted by Student Voices Count.[119] Originally, all presidential candidates with ballot access sufficient to represent a majority of electoral votes were invited.[120] In October 2016, Free and Equal extended the invitation to all candidates with ballot lines representing at least fifteen percent of potential voters: the Democratic, Republican, Libertarian, Green, Constitution, Reform, and Socialism and Liberation parties, as well as independent candidate Evan McMullin.[121] Gary Johnson, who participated in the 2012 debate, had already publicly declined in July 2016 to debate Jill Stein on The Young Turks because of a matter of "just time".[122]

Free & Equal debates, 2016
Date Host Location Moderators Invited participants
 P  Participant.     A  Absent invitee. Democratic Republican Libertarian Green Constitution Reform PSL Independent
Secretary
Hillary Clinton
of New York
Businessman
Donald Trump
of New York
Governor
Gary Johnson
of New Mexico
Doctor
Jill Stein
of Massachusetts
Lieutenant
Darrell Castle
of Tennessee
Businessman
Rocky De La Fuente
of California
Activist
Gloria La Riva
of California
Director
Evan McMullin
of Utah
1 October 25, 2016 University of Colorado Boulder Boulder, Colorado Ed Asner[123] A A A A P[124][123] P[124][123] P[124][123] A

Further reading edit

  • Alan Abramowitz. 2018. The Great Alignment: Race, Party Transformation, and the Rise of Donald Trump. Yale University Press.
  • Michael Tesler. 2018. "Islamophobia in the 2016 Election." The Journal of Race, Ethnicity, and Politics.
  • Julia Azari and Marc J. Hetherington. 2016. "Back to the Future? What the Politics of the Late Nineteenth Century Can Tell Us about the 2016 Election." The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science.
  • John Sides, Michael Tesler, Lynn Vavreck. 2018. Identity Crisis: The 2016 Presidential Campaign and the Battle for the Meaning of America. Princeton University Press.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Commission on Presidential Debates Announces 2016 Nonpartisan Candidate Selection Criteria; Forms Working Group on Format" (Press release). Commission on Presidential Debates. Retrieved August 1, 2016.
  2. ^ Sifry, Micah L. (July 27, 2016). "Third Party Candidates Need to Get on the Debate Stage to Make a Difference". The New York Times (online ed.). Retrieved July 28, 2016.
  3. ^ "General Election: Trump vs. Clinton vs. Johnson vs. Stein". RealClearPolitics. Retrieved July 28, 2016.
  4. ^ Welch, Matt (August 15, 2016). "Presidential Debate Commission Criteria Is Both Good News and Bad News for Gary Johnson – Hit & Run". Reason. Retrieved August 17, 2016.
  5. ^ Stelter, Brian (June 23, 2016). "Commission on Presidential Debates reveals how it'll determine invitees – Aug. 15, 2016". CNN. Retrieved August 17, 2016.
  6. ^ a b . Commission on Presidential Debates. September 16, 2016. Archived from the original on September 21, 2016. Retrieved September 16, 2016.
  7. ^ a b c d e Gold, Hadas (September 16, 2016). "Johnson and Stein fail to make cut for first presidential debate". Politico. Retrieved September 16, 2016.
  8. ^ "CPD Announces 2016 Debate Moderators". Commission on Presidential Debates. September 2, 2016. Retrieved September 26, 2016.
  9. ^ a b c d Climate? What climate? Across four debates in this year's campaign, no moderator asked about climate change, The New York Times (October 19, 2016).
  10. ^ Andrew C. Revkin, Climate Silence Goes Way Beyond Debate Moderators, The New York Times (October 20, 2016).
  11. ^ Nicholas Wells & Mark Fahey, The debate topics they finally talked about, CNBC (October 20, 2016).
  12. ^ Adam Johnson, The Debates Are Over, and No One Asked About Climate Change, Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (October 10, 2016).
  13. ^ David Leonhardt, The Debates Were a Failure of Journalism, The New York Times (October 20, 2016).
  14. ^ Oliver Milman, Why has climate change been ignored in the US election debates?, The Guardian (October 19, 2016).
  15. ^ a b Leo Shane III, Here are the biggest defense topics the presidential debates skipped, Military Times (October 20, 2016).
  16. ^ a b c Stephanie Stamm & Erik Hinton, What's Left Unsaid After Three Debates, The Wall Street Journal (October 20, 2016).
  17. ^ Blake, Aaron (October 19, 2016). "The final Trump-Clinton debate transcript, annotated". The Washington Post. Retrieved April 3, 2017.
  18. ^ a b c Jessie Hellmann, Clinton surpasses Trump in speaking time at final debate, The Hill (October 20, 2016).
  19. ^ "Qualifications, Consistency Help Clinton While Turnout Keeps Trump in the Hunt" (PDF). Langer Research. September 11, 2016.
  20. ^ "CBS-NYT AM presidential poll toplines Sept 15 2016". September 15, 2016 – via Scribd.
  21. ^ Agiesta, Jennifer (September 6, 2016). "Poll: Nine weeks out, a near even race". CNN.
  22. ^ "Fox News Poll: Clinton and Trump in a one-point race among likely voters". Fox News Channel. September 15, 2016.
  23. ^ "NBC News/Wall Street Journal Survey". HART RESEARCH ASSOCIATES/PUBLIC OPINION STRATEGIES. NBC News/Wall Street Journal. August 4, 2016. Retrieved August 5, 2016 – via Scribd.
  24. ^ . Commission on Presidential Debates. September 16, 2016. Archived from the original on September 30, 2016. Retrieved September 29, 2016.
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External links edit

  • . CPD.
  • Videos of the 2016 presidential debates on C-SPAN
  • A of the Las Vegas Debate created for the Miami Herald by Gramener

2016, united, states, presidential, debates, were, series, debates, held, presidential, election, commission, presidential, debates, bipartisan, organization, formed, 1987, organized, three, debates, among, major, presidential, candidates, first, these, presid. The 2016 United States presidential debates were a series of debates held for the presidential election The Commission on Presidential Debates CPD a bipartisan organization formed in 1987 organized three debates among the major presidential candidates The first of these presidential debates took place on September 26 2016 and set the record as the most watched debate in American history with 84 million viewers The second debate took place on October 9 and the third took place on October 19 All CPD debates occurred from approximately 9 p m to 10 30 p m EDT 6 p m to 7 30 p m PDT Only the Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton and the Republican nominee Donald Trump met the criteria for inclusion in the debates and thus were the only two to appear in the debates sponsored by the Commission on Presidential Debates The CPD sponsored vice presidential debate took place on October 4 2016 Only Democratic nominee Tim Kaine and Republican nominee Mike Pence appeared in it 2016 United States presidential debates 2012 September 26 October 19 2016 2020 Nominee Hillary Clinton Donald TrumpParty Democratic RepublicanHome state New York New YorkRunning mate Tim Kaine Mike Pence Contents 1 Commission on Presidential Debates sponsored debates 1 1 Topics addressed and not addressed 1 2 Speaking time 1 3 Polling 1 3 1 First presidential debate 1 3 2 Second presidential debate 1 3 3 Third presidential debate 1 4 Debate list 1 5 September 26 presidential debate Hofstra University 1 5 1 Format 1 5 2 Reception 1 5 2 1 Moderation 1 5 2 2 Viewership 1 6 Vice presidential debate Longwood University 1 6 1 Format 1 6 2 Reception 1 6 3 Moderation 1 6 4 Viewership 1 7 October 9 presidential debate Washington University in St Louis 1 7 1 Format 1 7 2 Content 1 7 3 Reception 1 7 4 Ken Bone phenomenon 1 7 5 Viewership 1 8 October 19 presidential debate University of Nevada Las Vegas 1 8 1 Format 1 8 2 Moderation 1 8 3 Reception 1 8 4 Viewership 2 Free amp Equal Elections Foundation sponsored debate 3 Further reading 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksCommission on Presidential Debates sponsored debates editMain article Commission on Presidential Debates The Commission on Presidential Debates stipulates three criteria for eligibility for the presidential debates constitutional eligibility to serve as president appearance on enough ballots to potentially reach 270 electoral votes and an average at least 15 on five selected national polls 1 For the vice presidential debate the running mates of the presidential candidates qualifying for the first presidential debate will be invited 1 By mid September Hillary Clinton Donald Trump Gary Johnson and Jill Stein were on enough ballots to reach 270 electoral votes however only Clinton and Trump had reached the 15 polling threshold 2 As of August 2016 update Johnson and Stein had polled as high as 13 and 7 respectively and had an average of 8 3 and 3 respectively 3 On August 15 the CPD announced that it would use the most recent CBS The New York Times Fox News CNN Opinion Research Corporation NBC The Wall Street Journal and ABC The Washington Post polls for the debate criteria and that candidates must be at an average of 15 in these polls 4 5 On September 16 the commission announced the official invitation of both Clinton and Trump to participate in the first debate to be held on September 26 at Hofstra University but Johnson and Stein did not meet the established criteria and would not be participants in the debate 6 7 The commission also confirmed that Clinton and Trump had committed to participate It was also announced that Mike Pence and Tim Kaine would be participating in the only scheduled vice presidential debate to take place at Longwood University on October 4 6 7 The 15 threshold was reapplied with polling numbers following the first debate in order to judge the participants in the second debate on October 9 7 Moderators for the four debates were announced September 2 2016 8 Topics addressed and not addressed edit Over the combined six hours of debate time at the three presidential debates and one vice presidential debate the issues most raised in moderators questions were the Syrian civil war six questions and terrorism four questions 9 U S Russia relations immigration job creation Trump s taxes and Trump s lewd leaked recording controversy were each asked about in three questions and Clinton s emails the Supreme Court Social Security taxation of the wealthy the national debt Iraq the Affordable Care Act uniting the country nuclear weapons and the legitimacy of the election were each the subject of two questions 9 A number of issues were the subject of a single question including expectations of police conduct race relations abortion gun policy birtherism jobs in the energy industry cyberterrorism Islamophobia the Clinton Foundation the Donald J Trump Foundation the strengths of the candidates opponents the skills of the vice presidential nominees the candidate s faith the low favorability ratings of both candidates the paid speeches given by Clinton Trump s Twitter posts Clinton s basket of deplorables remark Clinton s look and the candidates behavior 9 The debate moderators failed to ask a question about climate change at any of the three debates 9 although Clinton did touch on the issue twice as part of responses to other questions 10 The moderators failure to address the issue prompted complaints by commentators 11 12 David Leonhardt of The New York Times termed it a failure of journalism and a a grievous error 13 Prominent climate scientists Kerry Emanuel and Michael E Mann as well as activist group 350 org criticized the failure of the debates to address the issue 14 A number of other issues were either addressed sparingly or not at all On national security issues the sole mention of Afghanistan the U S s longest running war came in a mention by Clinton in response to a question about NATO in the first debate 15 Veterans and the VA were the subject of brief mentions six times over the three presidential debates but never in the context of major policy or reform proposals 15 On foreign policy a number of issues were not addressed by any candidate or moderator including Africa U S Cuba relations China s nine dash line South America Egypt and drone warfare 16 On domestic policy issues that neither candidate mentioned in any debate include universal pre kindergarten affirmative action the death penalty the NSA the Patriot Act marijuana charter schools and DACA or the Dreamers 16 On economic issues issues that neither candidate mentioned in any debate include budget sequestration the capital gains tax paid leave oil drilling and fracking pensions and labor unions 16 On Russian cyberattacks on the United States and influence on the election no questions were asked but during the third debate Clinton revealed her knowledge of behind the scenes events which she stated happened because Putin favored Trump whom she called a puppet Trump strongly rejected the description 17 Speaking time edit Speaking time at the debates was as follows At the first presidential debate Trump spoke for 45 minutes and 3 seconds Clinton spoke for 41 minutes and 50 seconds 18 At the second presidential debate Trump spoke for 40 minutes and 10 seconds Clinton spoke for 39 minutes and 5 seconds 18 At the third presidential debate Trump spoke for 35 minutes and 41 seconds Clinton spoke for 41 minutes and 46 seconds 18 Overall Clinton spoke for 107 seconds longer than Trump Polling edit The following polls were conducted prior to each of the respective debates and determined the candidates who participated in each debate Candidates in green participated in the debate while those in red were excluded Italics denotes the leading candidate in the respective poll First presidential debate edit The following polls were the most recent conducted prior to September 16 2016 the polling deadline for both the first presidential debate and only vice presidential debate Poll Date taken Hillary ClintonTim KaineDemocratic Donald TrumpMike PenceRepublican Gary JohnsonWilliam WeldLibertarian Jill SteinAjamu BarakaGreenABC The Washington Post 19 September 5 8 46 41 9 2 CBS The New York Times 20 September 9 13 41 41 8 4 CNN Opinion Research Corporation 21 September 1 4 43 45 7 2 Fox News 22 September 11 14 41 40 8 3 NBC The Wall Street Journal 23 July 31 August 3 43 34 10 5 Average 24 July 31 September 14 42 8 40 2 8 4 3 2 Second presidential debate edit The following polls were the most recent conducted prior to October 4 2016 the polling deadline for the second presidential debate Poll Date taken Hillary ClintonDemocratic Donald TrumpRepublican Gary JohnsonLibertarian Jill SteinGreenABC The Washington Post 25 September 19 22 46 44 5 1 CBS The New York Times 26 September 28 October 2 45 41 8 3 CNN Opinion Research Corporation 27 September 28 October 2 47 42 7 2 Fox News 28 September 27 29 43 40 8 4 NBC The Wall Street Journal 29 September 16 19 43 37 9 2 Average 30 September 16 October 2 44 8 40 8 7 4 2 6 Third presidential debate edit The following polls were the most recent conducted prior to October 14 2016 the polling deadline for the third presidential debate Poll Date taken Hillary ClintonDemocratic Donald TrumpRepublican Gary JohnsonLibertarian Jill SteinGreenABC The Washington Post 25 September 19 22 46 44 5 1 CBS The New York Times 26 September 28 October 2 45 41 8 3 CNN Opinion Research Corporation 27 September 28 October 2 47 42 7 2 Fox News 31 October 10 12 45 38 7 3 NBC The Wall Street Journal 32 October 8 10 46 37 8 2 Average 33 September 19 October 12 45 8 40 4 7 0 2 2 Debate list edit All presidential debates including the vice presidential debate ran from 9 00 p m to 10 30 p m EDT 34 2016 United States presidential election debates No Date and time Host Location Moderator ParticipantsKey P Participant Democratic RepublicanSecretary of StateHillary Clintonof New York BusinessmanDonald Trumpof New York1 Monday September 26 2016 7 9 00 10 30 p m EDT 35 Hofstra University Hempstead New York Lester Holt of NBC P P2 Sunday October 9 2016 9 00 10 30 p m EDT 35 Washington University in St Louis St Louis Missouri Martha Raddatz of ABC andAnderson Cooper of CNN P P3 Wednesday October 19 2016 9 00 10 30 p m EDT 35 UNLV Paradise Nevada Chris Wallace of Fox News P P2016 United States vice presidential debate No Date and time Host Location Moderator ParticipantsKey P Participant Democratic RepublicanSenatorTim Kaineof Virginia GovernorMike Penceof IndianaVP Tuesday October 4 2016 7 9 00 10 30 p m EDT 35 Longwood University Farmville Virginia Elaine Quijano of CBS P PSeptember 26 presidential debate Hofstra University edit Presidential debate nbsp The set of the first debateDate s September 26 2016 2016 09 26 Duration95 minutesVenueHofstra UniversityLocationHempstead New YorkParticipantsHillary ClintonDonald TrumpFootageNBC C SPAN Bloomberg PoliticsModerator s Lester Holt of NBCTranscriptCommission on Presidential Debates Politico The Washington PostFact checkingFactCheck org PolitiFact NPR The New York Times Associated Press Archived March 3 2017 at the Wayback MachineBloomberg PoliticsWebsitehofstra edu debateThe first debate took place on Monday September 26 at New York s Hofstra University moderated by Lester Holt of NBC It was originally scheduled to take place at Wright State University but the venue was changed due to security and financial concerns 36 nbsp Secretary of State Hillary ClintonNew York nbsp Businessman Donald TrumpNew York Format edit The first presidential debate was divided into six segments each of approximately 15 minutes in length with the moderator introducing a topic and giving each candidate two minutes followed by approximately 8 minutes and 45 seconds of facilitated discussion between the two candidates with both candidates receiving approximately equal time The questions discussed during the 90 minutes were at the sole discretion of the moderator and were not shared beforehand with the commission or with either campaign Each candidate spoke in front of a podium Besides applause at the beginning and end of the debate there was no audience participation allowed but sporadic applause occurred at various points throughout the 90 minutes 37 The segments were on the economy and job creation trade the federal deficit race relations and policing the war on terror the foreign policy of the United States and each candidate s experience in the political and business realm 38 Reception edit Writing on September 28 FiveThirtyEight found that every scientific poll to that point had suggested that voters thought Hillary Clinton performed better than Donald Trump in the debate 39 A CNN ORC poll of debate viewers found that 62 believed Clinton won compared to 27 for Trump 40 A poll conducted by Public Policy Polling found that 51 thought Clinton won the debate while 40 thought Trump won 41 A YouGov poll found that 57 of Americans declared Clinton the winner while 30 declared Trump the winner 42 A Politico Morning Consult poll showed that 49 of likely voters thought that Clinton won the debate while 26 thought that Trump won and 25 were undecided 43 Echelon Insights polling showed that Clinton won the debate 48 22 and that the debate made 41 of respondents more likely to vote for Clinton while 29 were more likely to vote for Trump 44 A Reuters Ipsos poll found that 56 of Americans thought Clinton did better while 26 thought Trump did 45 An NBC News SurveyMonkey poll shows that 52 of likely voters who followed the debate chose Clinton was the winner 21 chose Trump and 26 did not choose either candidate 46 A Gallup poll showed that more respondents thought Clinton did a better job than Trump by a margin of 61 to 27 47 A Fox News poll shows that 61 of respondents thought that Clinton won the debate while 21 said Trump did 48 An ABC News The Washington Post poll shows that 53 of respondents thought that Clinton won the debate while 18 said Trump did 49 A CBS News poll shows that 32 of likely voters say that they thought better of Clinton after watching the debate but only 10 of voters said that they thought better of Trump afterward 50 A panel of Los Angeles Times analysts consisting of Doyle McManus and two others found that Clinton won all six of the debate segments 51 Among swing state party officials and strategists surveyed by Politico 79 agreed that Trump did not win the debate 52 Moderation edit The performance of Lester Holt as moderator of the debate received mixed reactions with political critics stating that Holt struggled to keep control of the debate and although he challenged both candidates Holt s repeated attempts to get the candidates to adhere to the time restrictions were ignored 53 Michael M Grynbaum of The New York Times described Holt s performance by stating He was silent for minutes at a time allowing Hillary Clinton and Donald J Trump to joust and bicker between themselves and sometimes talk right over him prompting some viewers to wonder if Mr Holt had left the building He continued Being less conspicuous often means attracting less criticism and Mr Holt s conservative approach seemed designed to avoid the opprobrium that befell his NBC colleague Matt Lauer whose performance at a forum this month was widely panned after he repeatedly interrupted Mrs Clinton and failed to challenge Mr Trump 54 Hadas Gold of Politico wrote Lester Holt was on an island on Monday night And for most of the first presidential debate he stayed there letting the battleships of Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump shoot their missiles at one another It made for some memorable exchanges between Trump and Clinton matched in close up on most networks For some debate watchers that s what they want their moderators to do say go and let them run But it also left some gaps where viewers probably expected sharp questions 55 Viewership edit The debate set the record as the most watched debate in television history with 84 million viewers across the 13 channels that carried it live and were counted by Nielsen surpassing the previous record of 80 6 million viewers set by the debate between Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan in 1980 These numbers do not account for the millions of viewers who watched the debates online and the people who watched the debate at parties bars restaurants and offices 56 Two million concurrent viewers watched it live on YouTube while there were 8 million views on Facebook whose numbers do not break down into unique viewers in addition 1 4 million unique viewers watched it live on CBS s streaming service 57 All debate related video on YouTube exceeded 88 million views on October 3 2016 57 CNN Digital reported 2 4 million live streams 58 and Yahoo News reported 5 million views both live and on demand 59 Legend cable news networkbroadcast networkonline streaming Total television viewers Network ViewersNBC 18 156 000ABC 13 521 000CBS 12 082 000FNC 11 359 000CNN 9 805 000Fox 5 573 000MSNBC 4 895 000 Viewers 25 to 54 Network ViewersNBC 8 323 000ABC 4 802 000CBS 4 750 000CNN 4 435 000FNC 3 525 000Fox 2 709 000MSNBC 1 576 000 Total streams reported Network StreamsYouTube 2 000 000 60 Facebook 8 000 000 61 CBS 2 980 000 62 CNN 2 400 000 58 Yahoo 5 000 000 59 Twitter 2 500 000 63 Source adweek com Vice presidential debate Longwood University edit Vice presidential debate nbsp The debate s spin roomDate s October 4 2016 2016 10 04 Duration92 minutesVenueLongwood UniversityLocationFarmville VirginiaParticipantsTim KaineMike PenceFootageCBS C SPAN Bloomberg PoliticsModerator s Elaine Quijano of CBSTranscriptCommission on Presidential Debates The New York Times The Washington PostFact checkingPolitiFact NPR ABC News The New York Times Associated PressWebsitedebate wbr longwood wbr edu2016 Vice Presidential debate nbsp 2012 October 4 2016 2020 nbsp nbsp Nominee Tim Kaine Mike PenceParty Democratic RepublicanHome state Virginia IndianaThe vice presidential debate took place on Tuesday October 4 at Virginia s Longwood University moderated by Elaine Quijano of CBS Format edit The candidates were seated at a table with Quijano The debate consisted of nine segments each 10 minutes in length Both candidates were given two minutes to respond to questions with the remaining time used for a deeper discussion of the topic Quijano asked questions about Donald Trump s temperament the economy Social Security police and race relations nuclear weapons abortion and religious faith Reception edit A CNN instant poll found that 48 of viewers believed Pence had won while 42 thought Kaine won 64 Pence was criticized after the debate for not defending Donald Trump s comments 65 while Kaine was criticized for being too aggressive and interrupting 66 Two hours before the debate took place the website of the Republican National Committee declared Pence the clear winner writing During the debate we helped fact check and monitor the conversation in real time GOP The post went on to say that his strong points concerned the economy and Clinton s alleged scandals The post was removed prior to the start of the debate but not before getting widespread press and social media attention 67 68 69 Rachel Maddow of MSNBC said that the debate was occasionally incomprehensible due to the number of times that the candidates interrupted each other 70 According to ABC News Kaine interrupted seventy times throughout the debate while Pence interrupted forty times 71 Moderation edit Elaine Quijano moderated and thereby became the first Asian American to moderate a U S debate for national elected office in the general election 72 and the youngest journalist to moderate a debate since 1988 73 It was also the first time a digital network anchor had been selected to moderate a national debate 74 Viewership edit nbsp Patrons of a Philadelphia pub watching the debatesAccording to Nielsen the four broadcast networks and the three largest cable news channels averaged around 36 million viewers 75 Legend cable news networkbroadcast network Total television viewers Network ViewershipNBC 7 028 000CBS 6 462 000ABC 6 149 000FNC 6 083 000CNN 4 167 000MSNBC 3 125 000Fox 2 208 000 Viewers 25 to 54 Network ViewershipNBC 2 950 000CBS 1 184 000ABC 1 858 000CNN 1 680 000FNC 1 506 000Fox 1 107 000MSNBC 908 000 October 9 presidential debate Washington University in St Louis edit Presidential debate nbsp The set of the second debateDate s October 9 2016 2016 10 09 Duration90 minutesVenueWashington University in St LouisLocationSt Louis MissouriParticipantsHillary ClintonDonald TrumpFootageNBC CBS C SPAN Bloomberg PoliticsModerator s Anderson Cooper of CNNMartha Raddatz of ABC NewsTranscriptCommission on Presidential Debates Politico The New York TimesFact checkingFactCheck org PolitiFact NPR The New York TimesWebsitedebate wbr wustl wbr eduThe second presidential debate took place on Sunday October 9 at Washington University in St Louis moderated by Martha Raddatz of ABC News and Anderson Cooper of CNN 76 Format edit The debate was conducted in a town meeting format on Sunday October 9 with an audience of uncommitted voters selected by the Gallup Organization The CPD originally stipulated that half of the questions come from the audience while the other half would come from the moderators based on topics of broad public interest as reflected in social media and other sources 77 The Commission subsequently invited members of the public to submit and vote on questions through the bipartisan Open Debate Coalition s website Moderators chose from the 30 most popular questions 78 CNN s Anderson Cooper and ABC s Martha Raddatz were the moderators Candidates had two minutes to respond with an additional minute for the moderator to facilitate further discussion 77 Content edit Members of the audience were allowed to ask questions The eight questions in order were 79 The last presidential debate could have been rated as MA mature audiences per TV parental guidelines Knowing that educators assign viewing the presidential debates as students homework do you feel you are modelling appropriate and positive behavior for today s youth The Affordable Care Act known as Obamacare it is not affordable Premiums have gone up deductibles have gone up copays has gone up prescriptions have gone up and the coverage has gone down What will you do to bring the cost down and make coverage better There are 3 3 million Muslims in the United States and I m one of them You ve mentioned working with Muslim nations But with Islamophobia on the rise how will you help people like me deal with the consequences of being labelled as a threat to the country after the election is over What specific tax provisions will you change to ensure the wealthiest Americans pay their fair share in taxes Do you believe you can be a devoted president to all the people in the United States Perhaps the most important aspect of this election is the Supreme Court justice What would you prioritize as the most important aspect of selecting a Supreme Court justice What steps will your energy policy take to meet our energy needs while at the same time remaining environmentally friendly and minimizing job loss for fossil power plant workers this question was asked by audience member Ken Bone see below Regardless of the current rhetoric would either of you name one positive thing that you respect in one another The first portion of the content was dominated by discussion of a tape of Trump making lewd comments about women to Billy Bush which had been leaked two days earlier Trump attempted to deflect criticism by making counter accusations of sexual misconduct against Bill Clinton Trump had invited four people who had accused Bill Clinton of sexual assault to a press conference prior to the debate and accused Hillary Clinton of attacking those same women 80 At one point in the debate Trump raised the issue of Hillary Clinton s emails Trump stated that if elected he would appoint a special prosecutor to investigate Secretary Clinton in relation to the matter Clinton responded by remarking that the country was lucky that someone with Trump s temperament was not in charge of the law to which Trump promptly responded because you d be in jail The audience cheered this line to which Cooper interrupted the debate and warned the audience to refrain from making noise An array of scholars including political scientists and law professors criticized Trump s pledge to imprison Clinton saying that it reflected an anti democratic impulse 81 82 Reception edit A Politico Morning Consult poll showed that 42 of respondents considered Clinton the winner of the debate while 28 considered Trump the winner and a slightly higher percentage 30 were undecided 83 A CNN ORC poll found that 57 of viewers believed Clinton won compared to 34 for Trump despite the fact that most respondents felt that the latter exceeded expectations 84 An NBC News SurveyMonkey poll showed that Clinton won the debate with 44 to Trump s 34 while 21 said neither won 85 A Reuters Ipsos poll found that 53 of viewers said Clinton won while 32 said Trump won 86 According to a Gallup poll 53 of viewers considered Clinton to be the winner while 35 considered Trump the winner 87 A Fox News poll of debate watchers found 52 considered Clinton the winner compared to 39 for Trump with 9 saying they tied or did not know 88 A Baldwin Wallace University Community Research Institute CRI poll of likely Ohio voters showed that 52 found that Clinton won the debate 31 that Trump won and 17 found that it was a tie 89 According to a Qriously poll of likely voters in eight key battleground states 44 gave the win to Clinton while 33 gave it to Trump 90 According to a Fox 2 Detroit Mitchell Poll of likely Michigan voters 48 gave the win to Clinton while 36 gave it to Trump 91 Trump s claim that he won the second debate with Hillary Clinton in a landslide in every poll was found to be false by Politifact which noted that not only did Trump not win by a landslide margin he didn t win any of the polls at all 92 Ken Bone phenomenon edit Main article Ken Bone activist nbsp Ken BoneQuestioner Ken Bone a power plant operator from Illinois had a media presence and became an Internet meme in the days following the debate His rise to popularity was due to his name his red sweater and his use of a disposable camera prior to and after the debate Bone appeared on ESPN College GameDay and midnight He was portrayed by Bobby Moynihan during the cold open of NBC sketch comedy show Saturday Night Live s October 15 episode dancing to the song Get Ready for This 93 Bone received a short term endorsement deal with American transportation network company Uber to promote the launch of Uber Select in St Louis 94 A backlash against Bone happened after controversial posts under his username on Reddit were revealed 95 96 Viewership edit According to Nielsen approximately 66 5 million people watched the second presidential debate on television across 11 networks 97 YouTube reported 1 5 million peak live streams and 124 million views on debate related videos as of October 11 98 Legend cable news networkbroadcast networkonline streaming Total television viewers Network ViewersCBS 16 456 000ABC 11 512 000CNN 11 289 000FNC 9 888 000Fox 5 589 000MSNBC 5 542 000Univision 2 364 000 99 FBN 565 000 99 Viewers 25 to 54 Network ViewersCBS 6 411 000CNN 4 858 000ABC 4 641 000FNC 2 928 000Fox 2 823 000MSNBC 1 761 000 Total streams reported Network StreamsYouTube 1 500 000 98 CNN 2 300 000 100 Twitter 3 200 000 63 October 19 presidential debate University of Nevada Las Vegas edit Presidential debateDate s October 19 2016 2016 10 19 Duration93 minutesVenueUniversity of Nevada Las VegasLocationParadise NevadaParticipantsHillary ClintonDonald TrumpFootageCBS NBC C SPANModerator s Chris Wallace of Fox NewsTranscriptCommission on Presidential Debates The Washington Post The New York TimesFact checkingThe Washington Post The New York Times PolitiFact NPR CBS News Archived March 23 2021 at the Wayback MachineWebsiteunlv edu 2016debateThe third debate took place on Wednesday October 19 at 6 00 PM PDT at the University of Nevada Las Vegas 101 between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump 102 Format edit The format mirrored that of the first debate 90 minutes divided into six topical segments of approximately 15 minutes each The moderator began each segment with a question and gave each candidate two minutes followed by facilitated discussion between the two candidates with each receiving approximately equal time Questions were at the sole discretion of the moderator Each candidate was stationed at a podium Audience participation was confined to applause at the beginning and end of the debate 37 Moderation edit The debate was moderated by Chris Wallace of Fox News Channel s Fox News Sunday 103 This marked the first instance when a Fox News host moderated a presidential debate The topics announced in advance of the debate were debt and entitlements immigration economy Supreme Court foreign hot spots and fitness to be president 104 Reception edit A Morning Consult Politico poll found that 43 of respondents considered Clinton the winner of the debate with 26 saying Trump 105 An NBC SurveyMonkey poll showed that 46 of respondents considered Clinton as the winner where as 37 considered Trump the winner 106 An ABC News poll found that 52 of likely voters thought that Clinton was the winner with 29 saying that Trump won the debate 107 A Gallup poll showed that Clinton beat Trump 60 to 31 in perceptions of who won debate 108 A poll by the CBS News Battleground Tracker of viewers in 13 swing states found that 49 of voters in those states thought that Clinton won the debate while 39 thought Trump won with 12 calling it a tie 109 Trump s use of the phrases bad hombres and nasty woman spurred massive viral backlash 110 111 112 113 An Associated Press GfK poll which asked respondents about the candidates performance in all three debates found that 69 thought that Clinton performed better while 29 thought that Trump did 114 Viewership edit According to Nielsen approximately 71 6 million people watched the third presidential debate on television across 13 networks 115 116 YouTube reported 1 7 million peak live streams and 140 million views on debate related videos as of October 20 117 Legend cable news networkbroadcast networkonline streaming Total television viewers Network ViewersFNC 11 349 000ABC 10 962 000NBC 10 393 000CBS 10 120 000CNN 8 712 000Fox 6 622 000MSNBC 5 517 000PBS 2 700 000Univision 2 378 000Telemundo 1 479 000FBN 714 000CNBC 559 000 Viewers 25 to 54 Network ViewersNBC 4 472 000ABC 4 365 000CBS 3 703 000FNC 3 500 000CNN 3 462 000Fox 3 137 000MSNBC 1 801 000Univision 1 190 000Telemundo 739 000CNBC 289 000FBN 166 000 Total streams reported Network StreamsYouTube 1 700 000 117 CNN 1 900 000 116 Free amp Equal Elections Foundation sponsored debate editThe Free amp Equal Elections Foundation hosted a single presidential debate in 2016 It was held at the University of Colorado Boulder s Macky Auditorium on October 25 2016 118 The debate was co hosted by Student Voices Count 119 Originally all presidential candidates with ballot access sufficient to represent a majority of electoral votes were invited 120 In October 2016 Free and Equal extended the invitation to all candidates with ballot lines representing at least fifteen percent of potential voters the Democratic Republican Libertarian Green Constitution Reform and Socialism and Liberation parties as well as independent candidate Evan McMullin 121 Gary Johnson who participated in the 2012 debate had already publicly declined in July 2016 to debate Jill Stein on The Young Turks because of a matter of just time 122 Free amp Equal debates 2016N Date Host Location Moderators Invited participants P Participant A Absent invitee Democratic Republican Libertarian Green Constitution Reform PSL IndependentSecretaryHillary Clintonof New York BusinessmanDonald Trumpof New York GovernorGary Johnsonof New Mexico DoctorJill Steinof Massachusetts LieutenantDarrell Castleof Tennessee BusinessmanRocky De La Fuenteof California ActivistGloria La Rivaof California DirectorEvan McMullinof Utah1 October 25 2016 University of Colorado Boulder Boulder Colorado Ed Asner 123 A A A A P 124 123 P 124 123 P 124 123 AFurther reading editAlan Abramowitz 2018 The Great Alignment Race Party Transformation and the Rise of Donald Trump Yale University Press Michael Tesler 2018 Islamophobia in the 2016 Election The Journal of Race Ethnicity and Politics Julia Azari and Marc J Hetherington 2016 Back to the Future What the Politics of the Late Nineteenth Century Can Tell Us about the 2016 Election The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science John Sides Michael Tesler Lynn Vavreck 2018 Identity Crisis The 2016 Presidential Campaign and the Battle for the Meaning of America Princeton University Press See also editDemocratic Party presidential debates and forums 2016 Green Party presidential debates and forums 2016 Libertarian Party presidential debates and forums 2016 Republican Party presidential debates and forums 2016 Timeline of Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections and Timeline of Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections July 2016 election day References edit a b Commission on Presidential Debates Announces 2016 Nonpartisan Candidate Selection Criteria Forms Working Group on Format Press release Commission on Presidential Debates Retrieved August 1 2016 Sifry Micah L July 27 2016 Third Party Candidates Need to Get on the Debate Stage to Make a Difference The New York Times online ed Retrieved July 28 2016 General Election Trump vs Clinton vs Johnson vs Stein RealClearPolitics Retrieved July 28 2016 Welch Matt August 15 2016 Presidential Debate Commission Criteria Is Both Good News and Bad News for Gary Johnson Hit amp Run Reason Retrieved August 17 2016 Stelter Brian June 23 2016 Commission on Presidential Debates reveals how it ll determine invitees Aug 15 2016 CNN Retrieved August 17 2016 a b CPD Invites Hillary Clinton and Donald J Trump to Debate Commission on Presidential Debates September 16 2016 Archived from the original on September 21 2016 Retrieved September 16 2016 a b c d e Gold Hadas September 16 2016 Johnson and Stein fail to make cut for first presidential debate Politico Retrieved September 16 2016 CPD Announces 2016 Debate Moderators Commission on Presidential Debates September 2 2016 Retrieved September 26 2016 a b c d Climate What climate Across four debates in this year s campaign no moderator asked about climate change The New York Times October 19 2016 Andrew C Revkin Climate Silence Goes Way Beyond Debate Moderators The New York Times October 20 2016 Nicholas Wells amp Mark Fahey The debate topics they finally talked about CNBC October 20 2016 Adam Johnson The Debates Are Over and No One Asked About Climate Change Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting October 10 2016 David Leonhardt The Debates Were a Failure of Journalism The New York Times October 20 2016 Oliver Milman Why has climate change been ignored in the US election debates The Guardian October 19 2016 a b Leo Shane III Here are the biggest defense topics the presidential debates skipped Military Times October 20 2016 a b c Stephanie Stamm amp Erik Hinton What s Left Unsaid After Three Debates The Wall Street Journal October 20 2016 Blake Aaron October 19 2016 The final Trump Clinton debate transcript annotated The Washington Post Retrieved April 3 2017 a b c Jessie Hellmann Clinton surpasses Trump in speaking time at final debate The Hill October 20 2016 Qualifications Consistency Help Clinton While Turnout Keeps Trump in the Hunt PDF Langer Research September 11 2016 CBS NYT AM presidential poll toplines Sept 15 2016 September 15 2016 via Scribd Agiesta Jennifer September 6 2016 Poll Nine weeks out a near even race CNN Fox News Poll Clinton and Trump in a one point race among likely voters Fox News Channel September 15 2016 NBC News Wall Street Journal Survey HART RESEARCH ASSOCIATES PUBLIC OPINION STRATEGIES NBC News Wall Street Journal August 4 2016 Retrieved August 5 2016 via Scribd CPD Invites Hillary Clinton and Donald J Trump to Debate Commission on Presidential Debates September 16 2016 Archived from the original on September 30 2016 Retrieved September 29 2016 a b Clinton Trump Races Narrows On the Doorstep of the Debates PDF Langer Research September 25 2016 Retrieved October 5 2016 a b Dutton Sarah De Pinto Jennifer Backus Fred Salvanto Anthony October 3 2016 Hillary Clinton edges ahead of Donald Trump after first debate CBS News poll CBS News Retrieved October 5 2016 a b Aglesta Jennifer October 4 2016 Post debate Clinton takes the lead CNN Retrieved October 5 2016 Full Fox News poll results 9 30 Fox News Channel September 30 2016 Archived from the original on September 30 2016 Retrieved October 1 2016 Murray Mark September 21 2016 Poll Clinton Leads Trump Ahead of First Debate NBC News Retrieved October 5 2016 CPD Invites Hillary Clinton and Donald J Trump to Debate Commission on Presidential Debates October 4 2016 Archived from the original on October 6 2016 Retrieved October 5 2016 Fox News Poll October 13 2016 Fox News Channel October 13 2016 Archived from the original on October 17 2016 Retrieved October 14 2016 Dann Carrie October 11 2016 Post Debate Poll Shows Clinton Holding 9 Point Lead Over Trump NBC News Retrieved October 14 2016 CPD Invites Hillary Clinton and Donald J Trump to Third Presidential Debate Commission on Presidential Debates October 14 2016 Archived from the original on October 18 2016 Retrieved October 14 2016 Presidential debates 2016 schedule and what to expect Vox August 19 2016 Retrieved August 29 2016 a b c d CPD 2016 Debates www debates org Retrieved October 5 2020 University pulls out of presidential debate CNN July 19 2016 Retrieved September 26 2016 a b Commission on Presidential Debates Announces Format for 2016 General Election Debates Commission on Presidential Debates July 7 2016 Retrieved September 26 2016 Flagenheimer Matt September 26 2016 Presidential Debate Here s What You Missed The New York Times Retrieved September 26 2016 Election Update Early Polls Suggest A Post Debate Bounce For Clinton FiveThirtyEight September 28 2016 Retrieved September 28 2016 Agiesta Jennifer September 26 2016 Post debate poll Hillary Clinton takes round one CNN Retrieved October 20 2016 Prokop Andrew September 27 2016 Early polls and focus groups suggest Hillary Clinton won the debate Vox Retrieved September 27 2016 Moore Peter September 27 2016 57 of viewers say Clinton won the first debate YouGov Easley Cameron September 28 2016 Clinton Bests Trump in Debate Half of Likely Voters Say Morning Consult Retrieved September 28 2016 post debate survey toplines PDF Echelon Insights September 29 2016 Retrieved September 29 2016 Most Americans say Clinton won first debate against Trump Reuters Ipsos poll Reuters September 28 2016 Retrieved September 28 2016 Poll Majority of Voters Say Clinton Won First Presidential Debate NBC News September 28 2016 Retrieved September 28 2016 Clinton s Victory on the Larger Side for Modern Debates Gallup September 29 2016 Retrieved September 29 2016 New Poll Clinton Leading Trump After First Debate FOX News Insider September 30 2016 Retrieved October 1 2016 Poll Clinton wins debate with more saying Trump got facts wrong The Washington Post Retrieved October 2 2016 Hillary Clinton edges ahead of Donald Trump after first debate CBS News poll CBS October 3 2016 Retrieved October 4 2016 Round by round Our analysts say Clinton outpunched Trump Los Angeles Times September 26 2016 Retrieved September 26 2016 Shepard Steven September 27 2016 Insiders Hillary won Politico Bauder David September 26 2016 Moderator Lester Holt works to keep control of debate Yahoo Archived from the original on September 26 2016 Retrieved September 26 2016 Grynbaum Michael September 27 2016 Lester Holt Given a Choice Assignment Opted for Restraint The New York Times Retrieved September 27 2016 Gold Hadas September 27 2016 Lester Holt stays out of the way Politico Retrieved September 27 2016 Stelter Brian September 27 2016 Debate breaks record as most watched in U S history CNNMoney Retrieved September 27 2016 a b Spangler Todd September 27 2016 Clinton Trump Debate YouTube Draws Nearly 2 Million Live Viewers Online Record for Political Event Variety Retrieved October 3 2016 a b 9 805 Million Watch the First Presidential Debate on CNN Press release CNN September 27 2016 a b Liberman Megan September 29 2016 Yahoo News Coverage of the First Presidential Debate Receives Nearly 9M Page Views and More Than 5M Video Views Press release Yahoo News With nearly 2 million concurrent viewers and over 3 million live watch hours first presidential debate breaks political record YouTube Official Blog September 27 2016 Clinton Trump Debate YouTube Draws Nearly 2 Million Live Viewers Online Record for Political Event Variety September 27 2016 CBSN SETS NEW SINGLE DAY AND HOURLY VIEWERSHIP RECORDS FOR COVERAGE OF FIRST PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE CBS September 27 2016 a b Spangler Todd October 11 2016 Twitter Trump Clinton Second Debate Live Average Viewership Up 7 Most Tweeted Debate Ever Variety Pence edges Kaine in VP debate instant poll CNN October 5 2016 Elliott Philip October 5 2016 Why Mike Pence Didn t Defend Donald Trump Time Magazine Retrieved October 5 2016 via time com Wagner John Tim Kaine seemed like he was trying too hard at the VP debate The Washington Post Retrieved October 5 2016 RNC prematurely declares Mike Pence debate winner two hours before start time CBS News October 4 2016 Retrieved October 5 2016 O Donnell Noreen Klein Asher October 5 2016 RNC Website Declared Mike Pence the Winner of the VP Debate Hours Before It Started NBC Chicago Retrieved October 5 2016 RNC declares Pence winner of VP debate hours before start The Hill October 4 2016 Retrieved October 5 2016 Shapiro Rebecca October 5 2016 Rachel Maddow Hated The VP Debate For The Same Reason You Did the Huffington Post Retrieved October 5 2016 Struyk Ryan Tim Kaine Interrupted Mike Pence 70 Times in Vice Presidential Debate abcnews com Retrieved October 5 2016 Callum Borchers Unpacking Donald Trump s history with this fall s debate moderators The Washington Post September 5 2016 Littleton Cynthia September 2 2016 CBSN s Elaine Quijano Boosts Profile With Vice Presidential Debate Moderator Slot Retrieved October 5 2016 Shabad Rebecca October 4 2016 Who is Elaine Quijano moderator of the vice presidential debate cbsnews com Retrieved October 4 2016 Weprin Alex October 5 2016 VP debate ratings lowest since 2000 Politico Retrieved October 6 2016 home 4 2016 Presidential Debate Retrieved August 18 2019 a b Commission on Presidential Debates Announces Format for 2016 General Election Debates Commission on Presidential Debates September 27 2016 Archived from the original on April 3 2015 Berman Russell September 27 2016 You Can Pose a Question to Be Used in the Next Debate The Atlantic Retrieved September 27 2016 Full transcript Second 2016 presidential debate POLITICO Retrieved October 14 2016 Beth Shilliday Donald Trump Invites Bill Clinton s Sexual Accusers To Sit In 2nd Debate Front Row Archived August 17 2020 at the Wayback Machine Hollywood Life October 9 2016 Max Fisher amp Amanda Taub Trump s Threat to Jail Clinton Also Targets Democracy s Institutions The New York Times October 11 2016 Charlie Savage Threat to Jail Clinton Smacks of Tin Pot Dictators Experts Say The New York Times October 10 2016 Poll Hillary Clinton won the second debate POLITICO Retrieved October 11 2016 Agiesta Jennifer October 9 2016 Clinton wins debate but Trump exceeds expectations CNN Retrieved October 20 2016 Poll Likely voters say Clinton won second presidential debate NBC News Retrieved October 11 2016 Trump trails Clinton by 8 points after tape scandal debate Reuters Ipsos poll Reuters October 11 2016 Retrieved October 11 2016 Viewers Say Clinton Wins Second Debate Gallup com October 13 2016 Retrieved October 13 2016 Fox News Poll October 13 2016 FoxNews com October 13 2016 Question 30 Archived from the original on October 17 2016 Retrieved October 14 2016 BW poll shows Ohio voters leaning away from Trump www bw edu October 11 2016 Retrieved October 12 2016 CLINTON WINS AGAIN BUT DEBATE IS NOT A GAME CHANGER Qriously www qriously com Archived from the original on June 10 2017 Retrieved October 12 2016 Clinton Lead Doubles to 10 in Michigan Wins Second Debate PDF Donald Trump s POF claim that all polls show he won debate politifact Retrieved October 12 2016 Vulpo Mike October 15 2016 SNL s Presidential Debate Isn t Complete Without Ken Bone E Online E Retrieved October 17 2016 Vielma Antonio October 13 2016 Ken Bone lands Uber endorsement and t shirt deal CNBC NBCUniversal Retrieved October 16 2016 Sloane Garett October 14 2016 EBay Should Have Done Extreme Vetting of Ken Bone Advertising Age Crain Communications Inc Retrieved October 17 2016 Goble Andrew October 14 2016 Ken Bone Revealed Freaky NSFW Reddit History by Accident GQ Retrieved November 1 2020 Littleton Cynthia Schwindt Oriana October 10 2016 Trump Clinton Second Debate Ratings Fall 21 With 66 5 Million Viewers Variety Retrieved October 11 2016 a b Second presidential debate related videos rack up 40 percent more views than the first YouTube Official Blog October 11 2016 Retrieved October 11 2016 a b Record 11 3 Million Watch the Presidential Debate on CNN CNN Press Room October 10 2016 RECORD 11 3 MILLION WATCH THE PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE ON CNN Press release CNN Press Room October 10 2016 Presidential Debate C SPAN Archived from the original on August 9 2020 Retrieved September 28 2016 CPD Invites Hillary Clinton and Donald J Trump to Third Presidential Debate Commission on Presidential Debates October 14 2016 Archived from the original on October 18 2016 Retrieved October 15 2016 About the Debate University of Nevada Las Vegas July 22 2016 Archived from the original on October 2 2016 Retrieved September 28 2016 Moderator Announces Topics for Third Presidential Debate October 12 2016 Retrieved October 20 2016 National Tracking Poll Politico Poll Clinton Won Final Debate 53 of Republicans Would Accept Election Results NBC News October 21 2016 Retrieved October 21 2016 Clinton Vaults to a Double Digit Lead Boosted by Broad Disapproval of Trump PDF ABC News Langer Research Associates October 23 2016 Clinton Wins Third Debate Gains Ground as Presidential Gallup com October 24 2016 Retrieved October 24 2016 CBS News Battleground Tracker poll Who won final debate CBS News October 20 2016 Viral Quienes son los bad hombres o es que Trump tiene bad hambre La Opinion in Spanish October 19 2016 Retrieved October 24 2016 To some Trump s bad hombres is much more than a botched Spanish word PBS NewsHour Retrieved October 24 2016 Plank Liz Nasty woman becomes the feminist rallying cry Hillary Clinton needed Vox Retrieved October 24 2016 Women have already taken back Trump s nasty woman insult USA Today Retrieved October 24 2016 THE AP GfK POLL October 2016 PDF Archived from the original PDF on October 21 2018 Retrieved October 26 2016 Littleton Cynthia Schwindt Oriana October 20 2016 Final Ratings for Third Donald Trump Hillary Clinton Debate 71 6 Million Variety Retrieved October 21 2016 a b 8 7 Million Watch the Final Presidential Debate on CNN Press release CNN Press Room a b The three 2016 U S presidential debates rank as the most viewed political live streams of all time YouTube Official Blog October 20 2016 Retrieved October 21 2016 United We Stand Fest and Open Presidential Debate University Tour Program Outline Free and Equal Foundation 2016 Archived from the original on June 17 2016 Retrieved September 17 2016 United We Stand Fest amp Open Presidential Debate University Tour Program Outline Free and Equal 2016 Archived from the original on June 17 2016 Retrieved September 19 2016 Richard Winger October 6 2015 Free and Equal Announces Date and Location for General Election Presidential Debate Ballot access org Ballot Access News Retrieved July 7 2016 Join our United We Stand Festival amp People s Presidential Debate Tues Oct 25th 4pm freeandequal org Free and Equal Elections Foundation 2016 Retrieved October 22 2016 No More 2 Party System July 24 2016 Gary Johnson Declines To Debate Jill Stein As Offered By The Young Turks video YouTube Retrieved October 27 2016 Well just time you know a href Template Cite AV media html title Template Cite AV media cite AV media a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link a b c d Actor Ed Asner set to moderate free and open presidential debate in Boulder freeandequal org Retrieved October 20 2016 a b c Ed Asner Challenges Trump and Clinton to Debate freeandequal org Archived from the original on October 15 2016 Retrieved October 12 2016 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to 2016 US presidential debates Commission on Presidential Debates Announces Format for 2016 General Election Debates CPD Videos of the 2016 presidential debates on C SPAN A Visualization of the Las Vegas Debate created for the Miami Herald by Gramener Portals nbsp 2010s nbsp Politics nbsp Television nbsp United States Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2016 United States presidential debates amp oldid 1192225218, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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