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Home > U.S. presidential election debates


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Televised presidential debates have been a feature of every U.S. presidential election since 1976. The first televised debates were in 1960, when four debates were held between Vice President Richard Nixon and Massachusetts Senator John F. Kennedy. After a three-election gap, televised debates resumed in 1976:

Presidential debates are held late in the election cycle, after the political parties have nominated their candidates. The candidates meet in a large hall, often at a university, before an audience of citizens. The formats of the debates have varied, with questions sometimes posed from one or more journalist moderators and in other cases members of the audience. Between 1988 and 2000, the formats have been governed in detail by secret MOUs between the two major candidates; an MOU for 2004 was also negotiated, but unlike the earlier agreements it was jointly released by the two candidates.

Debates are televised and broadcast live on the radio. The first debate for the 1960 election drew over 66 million viewers out of a population of 179 million, making it one of the most-watched broadcasts in U.S. television history. The 1980 debates drew 80 million viewers out of a 226 million. By 2000, about 46 million viewers out of a population of 280 million watched the first debate, with ten million fewer watching the subsequent debates that year. In 2004, 62.5 million people watched the first debate, while 43.6 million watched the vice-presidential debate. [1]

Moderators of nationally televised presidential debates have included Bernard Shaw , Jim Lehrer, and Dan Rather.



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