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Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and Ohio Sen. J.D. Vance are appearing tonight in their first and only televised debate in the 2024 election campaign.
Event likely only time Vance and Walz will meet during campaign
CBC News
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Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and Ohio Sen. J.D. Vance are appearing tonight in their first and only televised debate in the 2024 election campaign.
Walz is the running mate of Democratic presidential nominee and sitting Vice-President Kamala Harris; Vance is the Republican candidate for vice-president, running with former president Donald Trump.
CBS News is hosting the 90-minute debate from its New York City broadcast centre, with CBS Evening News anchor Norah O’Donnell and Face the Nation host Margaret Brennan serving as moderators.
Vance and Walz shook hands before debating began.
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The debate began at 9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT. You can watch the live stream on CBCNews.ca, CBC News Network and Gem. The two men did not shake hands when they took the stage.
After the debate, The National will be live with analysis on CBCNews.ca, the CBC News App, CBC Television, CBC News Network and YouTube.
There is no live audience in the studio, as was the case in the presidential debates in this election cycle, but their microphones will not be automatically muted while one of them is responding.
That’s a change from the Harris-Trump debate last month and the June 27 debate between Trump and current President Joe Biden, who bowed out of the race in July.
CBS News said in a news release that moderators will reserve the right to turn off a candidate’s mic.
Unlike last month’s ABC News presidential debate between Harris and Trump, the moderators will not be fact-checking either candidate and are instead putting the onus on Vance and Walz to challenge one another’s statements.
CBS News said on Friday the moderators “will facilitate those opportunities” during rebuttal periods.
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During ABC’s presidential debate, network moderators pointed out inaccurate statements by Trump on four occasions — including an unfounded claim about Haitian migrants were eating people’s pets. Vance has also shared that claim.
Trump and his supporters accused ABC News moderators David Muir and Linsey Davis of treating him unfairly because there did not interject with corrections for any of Harris’s statements.
CBS News held a virtual coin toss on Sept. 26 to determine the order in which the candidates will give their closing remarks. Vance won and opted to speak second, giving him the last word in the debate.
While this will be an opportunity for U.S. voters to get a better understanding of Walz’s and Vance’s positions on a range of issues, vice-presidential debates are not as widely watched as the presidential match-ups.
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The 2020 face-off between Harris and former vice-president Mike Pence drew the second-highest viewership for a vice-presidential debate, according to the television and streaming ratings monitor Nielsen.
The most-watched vice-presidential debate in history happened in 2008 when Biden, who was then Barack Obama’s Democratic running mate, debated Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, the vice-presidential pick of Republican Sen. John McCain in his unsuccessful presidential bid.
It’s unclear if there will be another presidential debate before voters head to the polls on Nov. 5.
Harris’s campaign said she agreed to an Oct. 23 match-up on CNN.
But Trump rejected the possibility of another debate with her before election day, arguing that “it’s just too late” and that advance voting has already started.
With files from The Associated Press and Reuters