If all goes according to plan, Donald Trump and Joe Biden will meet exactly three weeks from today in Cleveland for the first of three presidential debates. A recent national poll found a plurality of Americans expect the Republican incumbent to win the debates, which isn’t necessarily bad news for the Democratic challenger: if expectations for Biden are low, it creates a bar that’s easier to clear.
That’s right: the expectations game has begun.
As we discuss every four years ago around this time, presidential campaigns invest quite a bit of energy in trying to manage expectations ahead of the debates. Aides sometimes go to comical lengths to argue that their rival is an extraordinary debater, while their boss is woefully unprepared for the events. (My personal favorite came in 2004, when the Bush/Cheney team, with great sincerity, told campaign reporters that John Kerry was the greatest debater since Cicero, the legendary orator from ancient Rome.)
This year, Team Trump is playing the same game, but it’s not playing it especially well. Late last week, for example, Jason Miller, a senior adviser to the Republican campaign and one of the key advisers for Trump on the debates, told Politico how impressive Biden is.
“Biden has been debating for a half-century. He is very good. Part of the reason he is very good is that he gives the same answers over and over again to questions for the last 30 years.”
Two days later, Team Trump told its supporters that the president will “DESTROY” Biden in the debates.
And therein lies the problem. Trump and his allies have spent months telling the public that Biden is old and addled, hiding in his basement, unable to speak in complete sentences. Team Trump is also now telling the public that Biden is a “very good” debater, whom the president will “destroy.”









