Chris Wallace, host of Fox News Sunday and moderator of the first presidential debate between President Trump and Biden, said he hopes to be “as invisible as possible” during his faceoff Tuesday in Cleveland, Ohio.
Trump tells Fox & Friends that he wanted to choose a support court.
He said, “I’m trying to stop them … to focus on the main issues … to explain to people at home why they want to vote against each other.” “If I did my job right, at the end of the night, people would say, ‘That was a big discussion. Who was the mediator?'”
The discussion will focus on some of the main topics of the day, including the coronavirus epidemic, the economy and the violent protests that have erupted across the country.
“Everything is different about 2020,” he said. “We’ve got the coronavirus, we’ve got this huge economic mess, now it’s a recovery, we’ve got this racial tension in this country … Violence on the streets… you know, it’s a different year. It makes it particularly difficult because 90 minutes – the length of this discussion is a lot of time, but it’s too awful to ask about these two men, ”he said.
In an exclusive interview with Fox & Friends, aired early Sunday, Trump said he was preparing for the next debate against Biden every day.
“When you’re president, you look at everything they ask. And they may disagree with you, but we’ve done a great job. We’ve built the largest economy in history,” Trump said in a joint statement. Interview with Fox News after Amy Connie Barrett was nominated to the Supreme Court.
Trump has decided to abandon formal formal preparations, although he said Sunday that former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani and his previous 2016 primary rival Chris Christie are helping him.
Biden’s team believes the significance of the debate could be exaggerated, but the Democratic nominee is preparing to aggressively take over the presidency.
According to a person who has a direct knowledge of the preparations on condition of anonymity to discuss international strategy, Biden’s campaign includes oral discussion sessions featuring Bidin’s senior adviser and former White House general adviser, Bob Bauer. Bauer has not donated to Trump’s attire in recent years, regardless of Trump stand-ins, but he is representing his style and expected strategy.
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“One of these two people will be the next president of the United States, and my job is to be as invisible as possible,” said Valce Lace.
Daniel Wallace of Fox News and the Associated Press contributed to this response.