By Trudy Ring
September 27 2016
__________________________________________________________________________________
In their first debate of the general election campaign,
Hillary Clinton was calm, policy-focused, and occasionally funny — and
Donald Trump was, well, Donald Trump.
That is to say, he often raised his voice, interrupted or
talked over Clinton (far more than she did to him), and made several
truly bizarre claims, some familiar, some new — among the latter, that
he has the better temperament to be president.
Trump I Have a Winning Temperament...
Clinton Does Not - NBC
The Democratic and Republican presidential nominees met at
Hofstra University in Hempstead, N.Y., for a debate moderated by NBC
journalist Lester Holt. They touched on a broad range of topics —
economic policy, race, law enforcement, birtherism, foreign policy, and,
toward the end, Trump’s attitude toward women.
At one point, Clinton directed viewers to her website for
live fact checking. One of the most well-known outlets for that sort of
thing — FactCheck.org — reported so many people were trying to sort out
the fiction from the truth that it suffered outages.
Clinton critiqued Trump’s economic plan, involving massive
tax cuts, as “trumped-up trickle-down,” a reference to the theory
embraced by President Reagan, that more money in the hands of the
wealthy would “trickle down” to the middle and lower classes in the form
of better jobs and wages. He denounced her as wanting to overregulate
businesses and drive them overseas, while saying he would bring jobs
back to the U.S. When Holt pressed him on how he’d bring them back, he
said by not letting them go in the first place.
Trump also contended Clinton has supported bad trade
policies, including the North American Free Trade Agreement, which he
called “the single worst trade deal ever approved in this country.” It
was approved when her husband, Bill Clinton, was president. However,
according to National Public Radio senior business editor Marilyn
Geewax, part of the NPR fact-checking team, “Most studies show NAFTA had
a relatively small impact on the economy.” Clinton also said she
carefully scrutinized every trade deal that came before her when she was
a U.S. senator from New York, and supported some and not others.
On other economic topics, Clinton said Trump rooted for the
housing crisis of eight years ago, saying it would enable him to buy
properties cheaply and make a profit selling them later — a claim PolitiFact rates as “mostly true.” Trump’s response to Clinton was “That’s called business, by the way.”
Trump likely did himself no favors with that remark, nor
with his responses to questions about his long-delayed release of his
income tax returns. Clinton said he may be hiding something, such as
that “maybe he is not as rich as he says he is” or “maybe he’s not as
charitable as he claims to be.”
“Or maybe he does not want the American people, all of you
watching tonight, to know that he has paid nothing in federal taxes
because the only years that anybody has ever seen [are] for a couple of
years where he had to turn them over to state authorities when he was
trying to get a casino license,” she continued. “And they showed he did
not pay any federal income tax.” Trump interjected, “That’s being
smart.”
He also offered to release his tax returns when Clinton
releases 33,000 deleted emails from her time as secretary of State; she
has come under fire for using a private email server during this period.
“I think you have just seen another example of bait and switch here,”
she responded. When Holt pressed her on the use of a private server, she
said it was a mistake, something she has said many times. Trump called
it an “illegal server,” but no one involved with it has been charged
with any wrongdoing.
On the question of race, with two more black men
— one who was definitely unarmed, one who may have been — killed by
police recently, Holt asked the candidates what they would do to repair
race relations in the nation.
Clinton noted that “race still determines too much,”
including how people are treated in criminal justice matters. We have to
restore trust between communities and the police. We have to work to
make sure that our police are using the best training, the best
techniques, that they’re well prepared to use force only when
necessary.” Holt asked her, based on a statement she made last week, if
she believes “police are implicitly biased against black people.”
She replied, “I think implicit bias is a problem for
everyone, not just police. I think unfortunately too many of us in our
great country jump to conclusions about each other. And therefore I
think we need all of us to be asking hard questions about, you know, why
am I feeling this way? But when it comes to policing … it can have
literally fatal consequences.” Police want more and better training, she
said.
Trump denounced her for not using the words “law and order,”
and he defended the use of the “stop-and-frisk” strategy in New York
City, police stopping pedestrians and frisking them for weapons. Holt
pointed out that the practice was abandoned because a judge found it
unconstitutional; Trump contended if that ruling were appealed, the city
would have won. Bill de Blasio decided not to appeal it when he
succeeded Rudy Giuliani as mayor.
The conversation also came around to Trump’s promotion of
the idea that Barack Obama was not born in the U.S. and therefore was
ineligible to be president. Holt asked what took Trump so long to
disclaim this theory, which he did only this year, after
the president produced his birth certificate five years ago. He didn’t
really answer, instead blaming Clinton and her campaign staff for
starting the rumors when she was running against Obama for the 2008
presidential nomination — but numerous news organizations have found
that Clinton and her staff had nothing to do with this.
Other flashpoints of the evening: Trump denied that he ever
supported the U.S. invasion of Iraq, saying he did nothing more than say
“I dunno, maybe” when the subject came up before the war — again,
demonstrably false. And when Holt asked Trump about his judgment, he
said he would have better judgment than Clinton, and I also have a much
better temperament that she has. … I think my strongest asset may be by
far is my temperament. I have a winning temperament.” That elicited
laughter from the audience.
And Clinton brought up his remarks about women, saying,
“This is a man who has called women pigs, slobs and dogs, and someone
who has said pregnancy is an inconvenience to employers.” He also, she
said, called a contestant in one of his beauty pageants “Miss Piggy” and
“Miss Housekeeping” because she was Latina.
Trump didn’t respond directly, instead demanding, “Where did
you find this?” When Holt told him his time was nearly up, he switched
to noting Clinton’s commercials, many of which use his own words against
him. “Some of it’s said in entertainment,” Trump said. “Some of it’s
said — somebody who’s been very vicious to me, Rosie O'Donnell, I said
very tough things to her, and I think everybody would agree that she
deserves it and nobody feels sorry for her.”
That is, well, arguable. For more on the debate, check out NPR’s transcript, with fact-checking, here, and The Washington Post’s annotated transcript here, also with fact checking.
Trump and Clinton will debate again October 9 and 19, and
their running mates — Mike Pence and Tim Kaine, respectively — will
debate October 4.
Read more articles from The Advocate, here.
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