HOW ABOUT
REAL DEBATES
The Tennessean
Editorial
Sunday , June 20, 2004
Every four years, leaders of the
two major political parties devise a system of debates that exposes their
presidential nominees to as little risk as possible.
Every answer is precisely timed.
Follow-up questions aren't allowed. The shape, the height and the position
of the podiums, the debate site, the moderators and the backdrop are carefully
negotiated. The candidates are tightly rehearsed so they can't stray from
scripted responses. The rules are such that a third-party candidate has
little chance to participate.
That's not the way it used to
be and that's not the way its supposed to me. But that's the way it is
because the party leaders call the shots. The result is a debate system
so boring that Americans tune out. Debate viewership has dropped from
60% of households in 1980 to 30% in 2000.
This year, some politically active
groups and individuals are challenging the debate system with one of their
own. The Citizens' Debate Commission argues that the current debate system
is a ''Beltway sham,'' and says it will sponsor a series of fall debates.
The group includes such widely diverse participants as former independent
presidential candidate John B. Anderson, former Republican contenders
Alan Keyes and Pat Buchanan and former Sen. Eugene McCarthy.
Where the current debate structure
requires third-party candidates to have an improbably high 15% in national
polls in order to participate, the Citizens' Debate Commission would lower
the threshold to 5%. The commission calls for a looser structure that
would allow rebuttals, follow-up questions and questions among candidates.
Don't expect the Democratic and
Republican operatives to be thrilled, and don't expect their nominees
to participate. The parties like the boring debate system they have created.
After all, anything that wrings life out of the presidential campaign
makes their scripted commercials all the more important.
But the two major parties and
their candidates should know that the Citizens' Debate Commission is right.
No matter how the two nominees perform during the debates, the real losers
under the current system are the voters. And democracy.
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