Trump tantrumed and even quit a debate with Joe Biden in 2020, but now he’s even more emotionally volatile

Donald Trump has tried to taunt President Joe Biden by claiming he’s ready for a presidential debate “anytime, anywhere.” The gambit left him little choice but to immediately accept when the Biden campaign offered debate dates in June and September, and terms like not having an audience and allowing real journalists to moderate. But within mere hours it became clear that Trump and the rest of the GOP already regretted the decision.

Pretty quickly, Trump tried to change the terms of the debate, pretending that it will be held on Oct. 2 on Fox News. The Biden campaign swiftly rejected this lie, accusing Trump of “playing games,” and pointing out that Trump frequently talks big but then ends up "pulling out at the last minute, or not showing up at all."

It’s true, of course. Trump has a habit of promising that he’ll do bold things and then backing out, whether it’s his empty promises to testify at his various trials or his false claims he’ll release policy proposals in a week or two. (It’s been over a month of silence, for instance, since he promised he would release an abortion platform in “14 days.”) In 2020, still burned by his terrible first debate with Biden, Trump refused to show up at the second and held an ego-flattering rally instead.

  • @jordanlund@lemmy.worldM
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    fedilink
    267 months ago

    RFK Jr. isn’t on the ballot in enough states to be considered a serious candidate.

    He’s on the ballot in Michigan (15), Oklahoma (7), and Utah (6). Total of 28 electoral college votes, far short of the 270 needed, even if he won all three (which he won’t.)

    He CLAIMS he has enough support to get on the ballot in 10 more, however this is unproven and he’s still not on the ballot here:

    California (54), Nevada (6), Idaho (4), Texas (40), Nebraska (5), Iowa (6), Ohio (17), North Carolina (16), Delaware (3), and New Hampshire (4), however all of those are unconfirmed.

    https://elections2024.thehill.com/

    Even if all of that is correct, and he won all of them, it would still only be 183 electoral college votes, 87 short of what’s required to be President.

    Debates are for actual Presidential candidates.