Another notable change is the absence of a live audience, a decision that shifts the focus solely on the candidates’ words and policies without external reactions. Each candidate will have access to basic necessities: a pen, a paper pad, and a water bottle, but will not receive aide interaction during the debate.
This 90-minute event is structured to have only two commercial breaks, offering viewers a mostly uninterrupted discussion. However, there remains uncertainty whether these rules will extend to other presidential hopefuls like Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Jill Stein, or Cornel West. Despite meeting several criteria, these candidates face hurdles in appearing on enough ballots and achieving sufficient polling numbers to qualify for the debate stage.
Kennedy, for example, has qualified for 89 electoral votes and has reached 15 percent in three nationally recognized polls, just shy of the threshold needed for debate inclusion.
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Following the June 27 debate, the next scheduled face-off between Biden and Trump will take place on September 10, hosted by ABC. This series of debates not only underscores the intense rivalry between the two leading candidates but also highlights the unique and potentially game-changing dynamics of this election cycle.




