September 28, 2004 • Connie Rice • NPR.org
Top 10 Secrets They Don't Want You to Know About the Debates
After weeks of political wrangling, Sen. John Kerry and President Bush will
square off for the first of three key presidential debates. Both camps have
agreed to an elaborate, 32-page contract that spells out everything from the
size of the dressing rooms to permitted camera angles.
But the controversy over the debates threatens to overshadow the events
themselves. Some citizen groups complain that the Commission on Presidential
Debates (CPD) isn't as non-partisan as it should be, and that Kerry and Bush
won't be pressed on urban issues. Commentator Connie Rice says that's just the
tip of the iceberg, and she's got another Top 10 list -- this time: Top 10
Secrets They Don't Want You to Know About the Debates .
(10.) They aren't debates!
"A debate is a head-to-head, spontaneous, structured argument over the merits
of an issue," Rice says. "Under the ridiculous 32-page contract that reads like
the rules for the Miss America Pageant, there will be no candidate-to-candidate
questions, no rebuttal to your opponent's points, no cross questions or cross
answers, no rebuttals, no follow-up questions -- that's not a debate, that's a
news conference."
(9.) The debates were hijacked from the truly independent League of Women
Voters 1986.
"The League of Women Voters ran these debates with an iron hand as open,
transparent, non-partisan events from 1976 to 1984," Rice says. "The men running
the major campaigns ended their control when the League defiantly included John
Anderson and Ross Perot, and used tough moderators and formats the parties
didn't like. The parties snatched the debates from the League and formed the
Commission on Presidential Debates -- the CPD -- in 1986."
(8.) The independent and non-partisan Commission on Presidential Debates is
neither independent nor non-partisan.
"CPD should stand for 'Cloaking-device for Party Deceptions' -- it is not an
independent commission on anything. The CPD is under the total control of the
Republican and Democratic parties and by definition bipartisan, not
non-partisan. Walter Cronkite called CPD-sponsored debates an 'unconscionable
fraud.'"
(7.) The secretly negotiated debate contract bars Kerry and Bush from any and
all other debates for the entire campaign.
"Under what I call the Debate Suppression and Monopolization Clause of the
contract, it is illegal for the candidates to debate each other anywhere else
during the campaign," Rice says. "We need a new criminal law for reckless
endangerment of democracy."
(6.) The debate contract effectively excludes all other serious presidential
candidates from participating in the debates.
"This is what I call the Obstruction of Democratic Debate Rule, which sets an
impossibly high threshold for third-party candidates... Where are we, Russia?
Isn't Vladimir Putin wiping out democracy in Russia by excluding all opposing
candidates from the airwaves during his re-election campaigns.? Most new ideas
come from third parties -- they should be in the debates."
(5.) All members of the studio audience must be certified as "soft"
supporters of Bush and Kerry, under selection procedures they approve.
"It's not enough to rig the debate -- they have to rig the audience, too? The
contract reads: 'The debate will take place before a live audience of between
100 and 150 persons who... describe themselves as likely voters who are soft
Bush supporters or soft Kerry supporters.' We should crash this charade and jump
up in the middle to declare ourselves hard opponents of this Kabuki dance."
(4.) These "soft" audience members must "observe in silence."
"Soft and silent... In what I'm calling the Silence of the Lambs Clause of
this absurd contract, the audience may not move, speak, gesture, cough or
otherwise show that they are alive and thinking."
(3.) The "extended discussion" portion of the debate cannot exceed 30
seconds.
"Other than the stupidity of the debate contract, what topic do you know can
be extendedly discussed in 30 seconds?"
(2.) Important issues are locked out by the CPD debate rules and party
control.
"Really important but sticky or tough issues get axed, because the parties
control the questions and topics," Rice says. "For example, in 2000, Gore and
Bush mentioned the following issues zero times: Child poverty, the drug war,
homelessness, working-class families, NAFTA, prisons, corporate crime and
corporate welfare."
(1.) Fortune 100 corporations are the main funders of the CPD-sponsored
debates, and the CPD's co-chairs are corporate lobbyists.
The CPD is run by Frank Fahrenkopf, a pharmaceutical industry lobbyist, and
Paul Kirk, a top gambling lobbyist," Rice says. "And the.biggest muliti-national
corporations write the checks that fund the CPD -- Phillip Morris,
Anheuser-Busch and dozens more. The audience may have to be silent and
motionless, but the corporate sponsors can have banners, beer tents, Budweiser
girls handing out pamphlets protesting beer taxes -- a corporate-sponsored
circus to go along with the Kabuki Debates. Could we get a more fitting
description of our democracy?"