BREAKING
THE RULES
The American
Prospect Online
Mark Goldberg
Friday, October 1, 2004
In the long week leading up to last night's
debate, George Farah, author of No Debate and executive director
of OpenDebates.org, appeared on no fewer than 11 television programs warning
viewers that the debates would be little more than glorified press conferences
in which both candidates would simply regurgitate their memorized talking
points. To prove his point, Farah often cited the lengthy list of debate
rules that were negotiated by both campaigns under the auspices of the
Commission on Presidential Debates.
From the size of the paper on
which the candidates can scribble notes to the height of the podiums,
the 32-page “Memorandum of Understanding” outlines in excruciating detail
much of the minutiae of the protocol surrounding last night's debate.
To the chagrin of the networks, one set of rules even purported to regulate
the kinds of camera angles that could be broadcast. To its credit, FOX
News, which operated the camera pool last night, publicly refused to follow
these statutes of the memorandum. (The memorandum explicitly outlawed
split screens or cutaways to the candidate who is not speaking. FOX, with
the other networks' support, rightly abandoned this rule.)
Of all the rules of the debates,
however, perhaps none is more important -- or more easily violated --
than the stipulations that candidates cannot pose direct questions to
each other. Bush and Kerry could have asked rhetorical questions
with the hope that the moderator would pick up on the point and direct
the opponent to answer it. Given the stifling rules of this debate, this
was spontaneity's single glimmer of hope, yet neither candidate ever put
Lehrer on the spot to do such a thing. In fact, the only real deviance
from the rules occurred during that awkward moment in which Kerry and
Bush briefly chitchatted about the Bush twins. “I'm trying to put a leash
on them,” said Bush in a rather benign interruption.
Before the debate, Paul Begala
appeared on Anderson Cooper's CNN program and blamed the Bush campaign
for wanting such an overregulated and scripted event. He argued, quite
plausibly, that the only way the Kerry campaign could persuade the Bush
campaign to participate in three debates was if Kerry acquiesced to a
bevy of rules that would have the effect of limiting the need for Bush
to think on his feet. This may be true, but the Kerry campaign still bears
some responsibility signing on to the final agreement.
No one was expecting Lincoln-Douglass
redux last night, but when the only real unscripted moment between the
two candidates involves banter about the president's daughters, it ought
to signal the disservice done to the public interest by these intense
regulations.
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