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David Muir, left, and Linsey Davis, right, pose for pictures with ABC News crew members at the end of the presidential debate with Vice President and Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris and former President and Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia on Sept. 10, 2024.
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As Trump and Harris sparred, ABC’s moderators grappled with conducting a debate in a polarized country

SAUL LOEB / AFP via Getty Images

As Trump and Harris sparred, ABC’s moderators grappled with conducting a debate in a polarized country

They faced the challenge of moderating what is probably the only general election debate between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump

The ABC News moderators were great. No, actually they were a “disgraceful failure." They cut off Kamala Harris too much. No, actually they corrected Donald Trump unfairly.

Such is the contentious tenor of the times in 2024's campaign season. And so it went Tuesday night at Trump's and Ms. Harris' first — and quite possibly only — debate.

In an illustration of how difficult it is to conduct a presidential debate in a polarized country, ABC News moderators David Muir and Linsey Davis fact-checked and corrected Trump four times Tuesday and were attacked angrily by the former president and his supporters.

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Trump, shortly after he left the stage in Philadelphia, sent out a message on his social media platform: “I thought that was my best debate, EVER, especially since it was THREE ON ONE!”

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Mr. Muir and Ms. Davis moderated what is expected to be the only debate between the former president and the sitting vice president. They asked about economic policy, the war in Ukraine, abortion, the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol insurrection and changes in Ms. Harris' stances since her 2020 presidential run.

In the end, Trump logged 43 minutes and 3 seconds of time talking, while Ms. Harris had 37 minutes and 41 seconds, according to a count by The New York Times.

Opinions on the coverage were a political litmus test

The debate's stakes were high to begin with, not only because of the impending election itself but because the last presidential debate in June — between Trump and sitting President Joe Biden, whose performance was roundly panned — uncorked a series of events that ended several weeks later with Mr. Biden's withdrawal from the race and Ms. Harris stepping in.

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Opinions on how ABC handled the latest debate Tuesday were, in a large sense, a Rorschach test on how supporters of both sides felt about how it went. MSNBC commentator Chris Hayes sent a message on X that the ABC moderators were doing an “excellent” job — only to be answered by conservative commentator Ben Shapiro, who said, “this is how you know they're complete s—-.”

While CNN chose not to correct any misstatements by the candidates during Trump's debate with Mr. Biden in June, ABC instead challenged statements that Trump made about abortion, immigration, the 2020 election and violent crime.

During a discussion of abortion, Trump made his oft-repeated claim that Democrats supported killing babies after they were born. Said Ms. Davis: “There is no state in the country where it is legal to kill a baby after it was born."

Mr. Muir pointed out that Trump, after years of publicly not admitting to his defeat to Mr. Biden in the 2020 election, had recently on three separate occasions conceded he had lost. Trump replied that he had been sarcastic in making those recent statements.

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“I didn't detect the sarcasm,” Mr. Muir said.

After suggesting that crime had gone up during the Biden administration, Mr. Muir pointed out that violent crime had gone down during that period, prompting an argument with the former president. ABC also noted, after Trump had repeated a debunked report that immigrants were killing and eating pets in Ohio, that there had been no evidence that had happened.

ABC moderators did not correct any statements made by Ms. Harris.

“Could they have done more? Yes,” said Angie Drodnic Holan, director of the international fact-checking network at the Poynter Institute, said in an interview. “Did they do enough? I would say yes. The alternative was none.”

Toward the end of the debate, CNN fact checker Daniel Dale said on social media that “Trump has been staggeringly dishonest and Ms. Harris has been overwhelmingly (though not entirely) factual.”

Both candidates didn't answer some questions

As is often the case in debates, the moderators often saw specific questions go unanswered. Ms. Harris, for example, was asked to address Trump's criticism that the U.S. Justice Department has been weaponized against him. She did not. She also skirted questions about changes to some of her past positions on issues. Mr. Muir twice asked Trump whether he wanted Ukraine to win its war against Russia, and he didn't answer.

The split screen views of both candidates onscreen told different stories. Trump often looked angry or smiled at some of Ms. Harris' statements, while avoiding eye contact with his opponent. Ms. Harris looked over at her opponents several times, often in bemusement, sometimes in open amusement, sometimes shaking her head.

Online anger toward how ABC handled the evening began while the debate was ongoing, and quickly became a talking point.

“These moderators are a disgraceful failure, and this is one of the most biased, unfair debates I have ever seen,” conservative commentator Megyn Kelly posted on X. “Shame on ABC.”

Answering online critics who complained ABC stacked the deck in Ms. Harris' favor, Atlantic writer James Surowiecki wrote that “the way they ‘rigged’ the debate is by letting [Trump] hang himself with his own stream of consciousness rambles.”

“It was like a 4Chan post come to life,” CNN's Jake Tapper said.

On Fox News Channel, anchor Martha MacCallum said after the debate that Ms. Harris “was never really held to the fire." Commentator Brit Hume agreed with her, but said something else was at play.

“Make no mistake about it,” Mr. Hume said. “Trump had a bad night.”

First Published: September 11, 2024, 11:40 a.m.

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David Muir, left, and Linsey Davis, right, pose for pictures with ABC News crew members at the end of the presidential debate with Vice President and Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris and former President and Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia on Sept. 10, 2024.  (SAUL LOEB / AFP via Getty Images)
SAUL LOEB / AFP via Getty Images
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