PHOENIX (AP) — The nonpartisan Commission on Presidential Debates, which has planned presidential faceoffs in every election since 1988, has an uncertain future after President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump struck an agreement to meet on their own. The Biden and Trump campaigns announced a deal Wednesday to meet for debates in June on CNN and September on ABC. Just a day earlier, Frank Fahrenkopf, chair of the Commission on Presidential Debates, had sounded optimistic that the candidates would eventually come around to accepting the commission’s debates. “There’s no way you can force anyone to debate,” Fahrenkopf said in a virtual meeting of supporters of No Labels, which has continued as an advocacy group after it abandoned plans for a third-party presidential ticket. But he noted candidates have repeatedly toyed with skipping debates or finding alternatives before eventually showing up, though one was canceled in 2020 when Trump refused to appear virtually after he contracted COVID-19. |
Guideline issued to boost development of private sectorNew hypersonic wind tunnel 'most advanced in world'Xi encourages more U.S. youths to visit ChinaXi replies to letter from Iowa's Muscatine High School studentsNation to advance pilot FTZs' openingChina Focus: Netflix's adaptation of ThreeBeijing International Film Festival to feature French film weekStone carvings found inside cave of China's Longmen GrottoesAntique book archive inaugurated in BeijingBeijing International Film Festival to feature French film week