Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (2024)

President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump are facing off in the first presidential debate of the 2024 general election on Thursday, June 27. It’s a historic rematch, the first ever debate between a sitting president and a former president. While some voters might feel a sense of déjà vu, the outcome of this election is far from certain. National polls show a close race between Biden and Trump.

The world was different when Trump and Biden debated four years ago, so we rewatched their 2020 debates to remind us of how much has changed. This time around, we expect the economy, crime, immigration, and abortion to emerge as major issues — and we’re here to help you make sense of these contested policy areas.

The debate, moderated by CNN’s Jake Tapper and Dana Bash, starts at 9 pm ET and will run for 90 minutes. In an effort to keep it focused, there will be no live audience, opening statements, props, or pre-written notes onstage. The position of Trump's and Biden’s lecterns will be determined by a coin flip and their microphones will be muted except for when it’s their turn to speak.

  • Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (1)

    Christian Paz

    What about Kamala?

    Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (2)

    Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (3)

    Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

    If President Joe Biden decides to drop out of the presidential race, it appears likely that his replacement at the top of the ticket would be his running mate, Vice President Kamala Harris.

    Until this week, that possibility wasn’t really worth pondering too much. But after Biden’s disastrous performance during Thursday night’s debate, Harris becoming the Democratic nominee is suddenly a more serious hypothetical.

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  • Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (4)

    Nicole Narea

    The Democrats who could replace Biden if he steps aside

    Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (5)

    Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (6)

    Angela Weiss/AFP via Getty Images

    Following a disastrous performance in Thursday night’s presidential debate, President Joe Biden is facing a flood of calls from Democratic pundits and strategists to step aside and make way for a different Democratic nominee amid real doubts that he is fit to defeat former President Donald Trump in November.

    Biden’s time at the debate was full of nonsequiturs, rhetorical errors, off-topic asides, and extended pauses to gather his thoughts. He spoke quietly and with a scratchy throat — his aides say he had a cold. Overall, his performance only added fuel to existing concerns about his age and ability to perform his duties.

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  • Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (7)

    Andrew Prokop

    Will Biden be the nominee? 3 scenarios for what’s next.

    Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (8)

    Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (9)

    Andrew Harnik/Getty

    Democrats are increasingly panicked about Joe Biden’s 2024 chances after Thursday’s debate. But what will that panic result in?

    The party is in uncharted territory. Doubts about Biden’s ability to defeat Trump have grown and speculation about whether he could be convinced to drop out of the race is mounting. Calls for Biden to quit are suddenly widespread in the media, even among commentators who had previously defended the president. Top Democrats are reportedly having similar discussions behind the scenes, but the extent and seriousness of those discussions is not yet clear.

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  • Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (10)

    Zack Beauchamp

    The silver lining to Biden’s debate disaster

    There is no way to sugarcoat President Joe Biden’s debate performance on Thursday night: It was a disaster. He muttered, babbled, and failed to pounce on Donald Trump’s lies and threats to democracy. By Friday morning, the country’s liberal commentators were telling Biden to step down — and, behind closed doors, many Democrats were saying the same thing.

    Amid this gloom, I found a ray of hope from an unusual source: Astead Herndon, the New York Times reporter who has been banging on about the political risks of Biden’s age for months (and taking a lot of Democratic fire for doing so). After being proven spectacularly right on Thursday night, Herndon didn’t take a victory lap — he looked to the future.

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  • Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (13)

    Andrew Prokop

    2 winners and 2 losers from the first Biden-Trump debate

    Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (14)

    Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (15)

    Eva Marie Uzcategui/Bloomberg via Getty Images

    So many important issues are at stake in the 2024 election: foreign policy, reproductive rights, immigration, the future of American democracy.

    But coming out of the first debate between Joe Biden and Donald Trump, one topic has crowded all those out: Biden’s performance.

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  • Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (16)

    Zack Beauchamp

    Donald Trump is getting away with it

    Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (17)

    Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (18)

    Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

    Three separate times during Thursday night’s debate, CNN’s moderators asked Donald Trump if he would commit to accepting the legitimacy of the 2024 election results regardless of who won. He never did.

    Instead, Trump said that he’d accept the results if he thought they were “fair and legal and good” — while at the same time repeating the false claim that the 2020 election was shot through with fraud (a claim that the moderators let stand).

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  • Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (19)

    Eric Levitz

    Joe Biden should save his legacy by ending his candidacy

    Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (20)

    Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (21)

    Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

    A comatose Joe Biden would make a better president than Donald Trump. And the president’s capacity to lead the executive branch is, by most accounts, far greater than his capacity to speak in coherent, extemporaneous sentences on CNN.

    But the idea that Joe Biden is the best possible standard-bearer for the Democratic Party this November has lost all plausibility.

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  • Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (22)

    Christian Paz

    Can Democrats replace Biden as their nominee?

    Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (23)

    Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (24)

    Eva Marie Uzcategui/Bloomberg via Getty Images

    That President Joe Biden, age 81, is an elderly man is nothing new.

    But the first presidential debate between Biden and former President Donald Trump Thursday night has pushed the question of Biden’s age to the top of the public’s consciousness. His verbal stumbles, weak voice (the campaign has said that he was dealing with a cold) and meandering responses to Trump’s jabs and the moderators’ questions are likely to bring up one question: Is there any way Biden could be replaced as the Democratic Party’s presidential nominee?

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  • Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (25)

    Eric Levitz

    4 reasons why the Biden-Trump debate could actually matter

    Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (26)

    Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (27)

    Morry Gash, Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images

    Two very old, often ineloquent white men will get into a lengthy argument in Atlanta on Thursday night — and, quite possibly, change the course of American history.

    Some may doubt that the first debate of the 2024 presidential election has such high stakes. There are indeed many reasons to think that this week’s oratorical showdown between Joe Biden and Donald Trump will be of no real consequence.

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  • Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (28)

    Li Zhou

    Trump’s rumored VP shortlist, explained

    Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (29)

    Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (30)

    Drew Angerer/Getty Images

    Former President Donald Trump could soon make an announcement about his pick for vice president, a choice that could prove to be uniquely consequential this cycle.

    In past elections, a nominee’s running mate has been closely watched for a variety of reasons. They may bring experience to balance a nominee’s lack of it (think Barack Obama’s choice of Joe Biden), or they may appeal to a region or demographic that the nominee would like to reach (think Donald Trump’s pick of Mike Pence), or they may amplify a presidential campaign’s message (think Bill Clinton with Al Gore).

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  • Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (31)

    Christian Paz

    We rewatched the 2020 Trump-Biden debates. There’s so much we didn’t see coming.

    Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (32)

    Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (33)

    Photo Illustration by Pavlo Conchar / SOPA Images / LightRocket via Getty Images

    The last time Joe Biden and Donald Trump debated, the country and the world were in a mess.

    The coronavirus pandemic was raging, the first vaccines were still months away from being rolled out, and Trump had just recovered from a Covid infection (which he might have had when he debated Biden the first time).

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  • Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (34)

    Kimberly Mas

    Is the US running out of Social Security?

    There’s no denying that Americans rely heavily on Social Security benefits. Estimates from the Social Security Administration found that 97 percent of adults over the age of 60 are either collecting or will start collecting Social Security. As of February 2023, about one in every five residents in the US collected benefits from these funds. For such a widely used program, it’s a bit surprising that people in the US know so little about how it works.

    To be fair, most of the news around this program over the past decade has been about how it’s doomed in one way or another. Millennials and younger people may see the money being taxed from their paychecks and believe they’ll probably never see it again, but is the program really destined to fail? And what do we stand to lose if it does? Check out the video above to get the most basic facts about Social Security in the United States and what to expect in the coming years.

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  • Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (35)

    Eric Levitz

    Trump just opened the door to Social Security cuts. Take him seriously.

    Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (36)

    Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (37)

    Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

    During his 2016 campaign, Donald Trump called for a ban on all Muslim immigration to the United States, the targeted assassination of terrorists’ family members, the overturning of Roe v. Wade, the repeal of the Affordable Care Act, and enormous corporate tax cuts.

    And voters considered him the most “moderate” Republican candidate in more than four decades.

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  • Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (38)

    Nicole Narea

    Biden’s vs. Trump’s economy, in 8 charts

    Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (39)

    Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (40)

    Brendan Smialowski and Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images

    American economic pessimism has been bafflingly persistent despite major indicators showing that the economy is actually strong. Unemployment is low, inflation is significantly down from its 2022 peak (if sticky and ticking up in the last month), wages are up, the stock market is hitting new all-time highs, and it looks like the Federal Reserve might be able to keep the US out of a recession.

    Surveys are beginning to capture growing consumer confidence — but for President Joe Biden, the question is whether it’s rising quickly enough for him to avoid being penalized in the 2024 election.

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  • Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (41)

    Jerusalem Demsas

    No, Biden did not call Black people “superpredators”

    Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (42)

    Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (43)

    Julio Cortez/AP

    President Trump has been pushing the lie that his opponent, former Vice President Joe Biden, called Black people “superpredators”— but there’s no record of him doing so.

    During the final presidential debate in Nashville, Tennessee, Trump repeated this accusation in response to a question about Black Americans having to have “The Talk” with their children about how to safely interact with police. Trump skipped over answering the actual question and went straight to a critique of Biden’s record:

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  • Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (44)

    Alex Ward

    Did Trump call US war dead “losers” and “suckers”? The controversy, explained.

    Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (45)

    Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (46)

    Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images

    Four reputable news outlets, all citing anonymous sources, report President Donald Trump disparaged US troops, veterans, and missing service members, with several outlets reporting he has called military members “losers.” Yet the president, along with current and former staff on the record, continues to dispute those stories.

    The reporting is explosive. The denials are emphatic. And the consequences are potentially enormous.

    Read Article >

Biden vs. Trump: The first 2024 presidential debate (2024)
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