Complaints Ask FEC, FCC To Investigate ABC For Breaking Broadcast And Donation Rules In Debate
Broadcasters must present debates in the public interest, and corporations can't donate to campaigns.
ABC News anchor Linsey Davis, who co-moderated the presidential debate between Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris, has admitted there was a motivation driving the decision to fact-check Donald Trump.
In a new interview, Davis confirmed that she and co-moderator David Muir fact-checked Trump because of concerns involving President Joe Biden's performance at the June 27 debate. It was that debate, of course, that sent concerns about Biden's cognitive decline into the stratosphere. And those concerns apparently motivated Democratic Party leaders to force Biden to step down as their party's presidential candidate.
'There is a stereotype that I am acutely aware of that I can’t be unbiased covering this moment.'
"People were concerned that statements were allowed to just hang and not [be] disputed by the candidate Biden, at the time, or the moderators," Davis told the Los Angeles Times.
Davis notably used passive language in her remarks. "People were concerned" — but who, exactly? "Statements were allowed" — but wasn't it a debate between Biden and Trump in which both candidates made statements for more than an hour?
In the debate this time, Davis was responsible for a memorable — and controversial — fact check.
While the candidates were discussing abortion, Trump alluded to the fact that some states — seven states, in fact, including Washington, D.C. — have zero legal restrictions on abortion. Trump even hinted at Minnesota's extreme abortion policies, using his classic Trumpian vernacular, and referred to Ralph Northam's horrifying comments about so-called post-birth abortions.
It's all true. And yet Davis chose to fact-check Trump.
"There is no state in this country where it is legal to kill a baby after it's born," she interjected.
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Technically, it's true. Killing a baby after birth is murder, and murder is illegal. But Democrats like Harris refuse to state whether they support any restrictions on abortion. At the debate, Harris was asked whether she supports restrictions on abortion, but she dodged the question completely.
The question, then, is this: If a person doesn't support any abortion restrictions, does she believe abortion should be legal under any and every circumstance and at every gestational age?
The problem with Davis' fact-check is not only that it provided false cover for Harris and Democrats, but that Muir and Davis fact-checked Trump only. Harris spewed numerous falsehoods and lies, but most viewers did not know this because the moderators chose not to call her out.
The one-sided fact-checking, the moderators' repeated interrupting of Trump, and the framing of many questions led to accusations that ABC was biased against Trump.
Davis' comments to the L.A. Times seem to confirm that ABC sought to ensure through editorialized fact-checks — which themselves were not subjected to live scrutiny — that the Democrat on stage did not have another disastrous debate performance.
To that point, Davis — who is a part of the same sorority as Harris — acknowledged that she is aware of bias accusations. However, she ignores them.
"There is a stereotype that I am acutely aware of that I can’t be unbiased covering this moment," she told the L.A. Times. "And the anonymous Instagram people serve as reminders every day."
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Former President Donald Trump and current Vice President Kamala Harris took the stage Tuesday night for their first — and perhaps only — debate in the run-up to the 2024 presidential election.
The debate was held at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia and moderated by David Muir and Linsey Davis of ABC News. Both Muir and Davis engaged in questionable fact-checking of some of Trump's assertions but permitted some of Harris' claims to go unchallenged.
For example, after Trump suggested that some Democrats, including former Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam, support abortion after birth, Davis indicated that no one supports post-birth abortion, chiming in to say that "there is no state in this country where it is legal to kill a baby after it's born."
It turns out that in 2019, Northam did indicate that he would support post-birth abortion in some cases.
"If a mother is in labor, I can tell you exactly what would happen," Northam said on radio station WTOP. "The infant would be delivered, the infant would be kept comfortable, the infant would be resuscitated if that’s what the mother and the family desired. And then a discussion would ensue between the physicians and the mother."
'She got no votes. He got 14 million votes. You talk about a threat to democracy. He got 14 million votes, and they threw him out of office.'
Later, Muir insisted he "didn't detect the sarcasm" Trump claimed he used when he stated he lost the 2020 election "by a whisker."
"We have to have borders, and we have to have good elections," Trump said. "Our elections are bad."
Yet when Harris made veiled reference to long-debunked hoaxes that Trump characterized the white supremacists in Charlottesville in 2017 as "very fine people" and some American servicemembers as "suckers and losers," she received no pushback from Muir or Davis.
Throughout the night, Harris did manage to avoid the word-salad speeches for which she is well-known. However, she frequently made dramatic facial expressions that appeared even more theatrical when juxtaposed with Trump's stoic demeanor.
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During the night, Harris was forced to declare tepid support for Israel while also noting that Hamas is a "terrorist organization." She also stated that she owns a gun, though she declined to elaborate on the type of gun she owns, when she purchased it, and whether she has ever fired it.
Harris has previously expressed support for a "mandatory buyback program" for guns.
After Harris suggested during the debate that Trump was a threat to democracy, Trump reminded the audience that Harris won no votes in the 2024 Democratic primary, whereas President Joe Biden won 14 million, and that Harris and other Democrats "threw him out of a campaign like a dog."
"She got no votes. He got 14 million votes. You talk about a threat to democracy. He got 14 million votes, and they threw him out of office. And you know what? I'll give you a little secret. He hates her. He can't stand her," Trump claimed.
"Where is our president?"
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Trump also managed to land a couple of rhetorical punches as well, at different moments telling her, "Quiet, please," and "I'm talking now. Does that sound familiar?" quipping a similar line Harris used in the vice presidential debate against Mike Pence in 2020.
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Perhaps Trump's strongest moment, however, came in his closing remarks, when he asked the key question of his campaign: "Why hasn't she done" the things she's now promising to do?
"So she just started by saying she's going to do this, she's going to do that, she's going to do all these wonderful things," Trump's closing remarks began. "Why hasn't she done it? She's been there for three and a half years. They've had three and a half years to fix the border. They've had three and a half years to create jobs."
"Why hasn't she done it?"
Earlier this summer, Trump prevailed in a debate against President Joe Biden, who appeared slow and confused and who struggled mightily to articulate his points.
About a month after that June debate, Biden dropped out of the 2024 race, and Harris was soon afterward selected by DNC delegates to replace Biden at the top of the Democratic ticket.
Harris did not participate in the 2024 presidential primary race and therefore did not receive any votes from the American people. She did run in the 2020 Democratic primary but failed to secure a single vote in that race as well, having dropped out before the Iowa caucus.
For now, the only other debate involving the presidential race will be between Trump and Harris' respective running mates, Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio) and Gov. Tim Walz (D-Minn.). That vice presidential debate, hosted by CBS News, is scheduled to take place in New York City on October 1.
Trump attempted to debate Harris on Fox News earlier this month, but Harris did not appear. Instead, Trump participated in a raucous town hall event with Sean Hannity in Pennsylvania.
Trump also offered to debate later this month, but the Harris team has not agreed to participate, suggesting instead that they debate again in October.
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