Alyssa Farah Griffin, a former communications director in Donald Trump’s White House, suggested the former president’s taunting of President Joe Biden over their newly-announced presidential debates is a bad move.
On Wednesday’s broadcast of CNN’s “Situation Room,” anchor Wolf Blitzer said the presumptive GOP nominee is “setting very low expectations” ahead of the June and September debates with his baseless claim that Biden “can’t put two sentences together.”
“That’s a terrible strategy,” Griffin said.
She recalled Trump’s similar tactic before Biden’s State of the Union address when his campaign “essentially said, ‘If he doesn’t keel over at the podium.’ That was the bar that they set.”
When Biden “outperformed expectations” at the SOTU he “got a bump,” said Griffin. Trump’s attacks were “entirely the wrong tact.”
The 2024 election debates will be different because they’ll be “for those sort of double-haters, those swing voters who aren’t necessarily happy with either candidate but we know are going to decide this election,” said Griffin.
But which of the candidates benefits the most remains to be seen, she added.
Biden is “good when he’s not in front of a big audience,” Griffin noted. “Donald Trump loves a big audience, but at the same time, Donald Trump actually might be a bit more scaled back in a more intimate setting.”
Griffin expanded on that theme on X, formerly Twitter, where she said the debates could “be significant for either candidate” because the number of voters “who are legitimately undecided in this rematch is historically small.”
CNN will host its debate on June 27. ABC’s debate will take place on Sept. 10.
Trump’s suggestion of a Fox News-hosted debate has so far been ignored by the Biden campaign.
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