President Donald Trump and Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden are set to face off Tuesday in their first head-to-head debate, with the Nov. 3 election just over a month away.
Chris Wallace of Fox News will moderate the debate.
Biden’s campaign claimed Trump’s campaign asked Wallace not to bring up how many Americans have died with COVID-19, which a Trump campaign official called “a lie.”
Biden’s deputy campaign manager Kate Bedingfield responded by accusing the president of making the claim in an attempt to deflect away from the COVID-19 pandemic.
Asked by a reporter to respond to Trump’s claims, Biden said, “He’s almost … No, I have no comment.”
The Biden campaign announced Tuesday that the nominee’s guests for the debate will be Kristin Urquiza, whose father died with COVID-19; Gurnee Green, a small business owner from Cleveland Heights; and James Evanoff Jr., a service technician in Cleveland who is part of the United Steel Workers union.
Trump’s guests will include his lawyer Rudy Giuliani, and Ultimate Fighting Championship fighter Colby Covington, a Trump official told reporters during the flight to Cleveland.
Corey Lewandowski, a senior Trump campaign adviser, said on “Fox & Friends” on Tuesday morning that Trump will remind viewers of “all the promises he made and all the promises he’s delivered.”
Biden, he added, “has never solved a problem” despite spending decades in Washington.
Asked what he wants to accomplish during the debate, Biden told reporters that he plans to “tell the truth,” without expanding further.
The second debate, slated for Miami on Oct. 15, will be moderated by Steve Scully, an executive producer for C-SPAN, according to the Commission on Presidential Debates, which describes itself as a nonpartisan nonprofit that handles scheduling and details for presidential debates.
Kristen Welker, a White House correspondent for NBC News, was tabbed to moderate the third debate, scheduled in Nashville, Tennessee, on Oct. 22.
USA Today’s Washington bureau chief Susan Page is marked down to moderate the sole debate between the vice president and the Democrat nominee.
Vice President Mike Pence and Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) will debate in Salt Lake City, Utah, on Oct. 7.